Bitcoin Forum
June 16, 2024, 04:09:56 AM *
News: Voting for pizza day contest
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register More  
Pages: « 1 ... 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 [67] 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 ... 227 »
  Print  
Author Topic: Bitcoin XT - Officially #REKT (also goes for BIP101 fraud)  (Read 378930 times)
VeritasSapere
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 546
Merit: 500



View Profile
October 01, 2015, 06:18:06 PM
Last edit: October 02, 2015, 12:06:03 AM by VeritasSapere
 #1321

It is concerning that such a strong false narrative has been allowed to be build up. Even if you disagree with BIP101 it is not constructive that there is so much misinformation and ad hominem.
brg444 (OP)
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 644
Merit: 504

Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks


View Profile
October 01, 2015, 06:22:24 PM
 #1322

It is concerning that such a strong false narrative has been allowed to build up. Even if you disagree with BIP101 it is not productive that there is so much misinformation and ad hominem.

Thanks for doing me the service of repeatedly bumping the thread during my absence.


"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
muyuu
Donator
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 980
Merit: 1000



View Profile
October 03, 2015, 03:59:29 PM
 #1323

Three creative ways XTards are falsifying hash power in rent-a-hash and pay-per-hash schemes:

https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoinxt/comments/3natjy/stepbystep_instructions_for_how_to_rent_hashing/

https://www.bigblockbounty.com/

https://cryptoplay.net/vote/

Making sure these spoofed votes are overwhelmingly non-indicative of hash power.

GPG ID: 7294199D - OTC ID: muyuu (470F97EB7294199D)
forum tea fund BTC 1Epv7KHbNjYzqYVhTCgXWYhGSkv7BuKGEU DOGE DF1eTJ2vsxjHpmmbKu9jpqsrg5uyQLWksM CAP F1MzvmmHwP2UhFq82NQT7qDU9NQ8oQbtkQ
Peter R
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1162
Merit: 1007



View Profile
October 03, 2015, 04:36:59 PM
 #1324

Three creative ways XTards are falsifying hash power in rent-a-hash and pay-per-hash schemes:

https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoinxt/comments/3natjy/stepbystep_instructions_for_how_to_rent_hashing/

https://www.bigblockbounty.com/

https://cryptoplay.net/vote/

Making sure these spoofed votes are overwhelmingly non-indicative of hash power.

Proof-of-work is proof of work done.  Unlike node count, it cannot be spoofed.

Miners (a) attempt to earn a profit with their hash power, and (b) express their acceptance of protocol rules by way they construct blocks and by the blocks upon which they mine.  When a miner points his hash power at a pool, he forfeits (b).  When a miner points his hash power at NiceHash (the hash renting service), he sells (b) to the highest bidder (who right now are people who want BIP101 blocks mined).  

This is an example of a market becoming more efficient.  If NiceHash didn't exists, some of those same people would eventually purchase physical hash power, resulting (eventually) in a similar outcome (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coase_theorem).

Run Bitcoin Unlimited (www.bitcoinunlimited.info)
iCEBREAKER
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2156
Merit: 1072


Crypto is the separation of Power and State.


View Profile WWW
October 03, 2015, 04:44:09 PM
 #1325

Three creative ways XTards are falsifying hash power in rent-a-hash and pay-per-hash schemes:

https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoinxt/comments/3natjy/stepbystep_instructions_for_how_to_rent_hashing/

https://www.bigblockbounty.com/

https://cryptoplay.net/vote/

Making sure these spoofed votes are overwhelmingly non-indicative of hash power.

Proof-of-work is proof of work done.  Unlike node count, it cannot be spoofed.

You misunderstand.

What is being spoofed is the version stamp (not the work, obviously).

Do you have any experience using mining pools?  Have you even mined a single Bitcoin?


██████████
█████████████████
██████████████████████
█████████████████████████
████████████████████████████
████
████████████████████████
█████
███████████████████████████
█████
███████████████████████████
██████
████████████████████████████
██████
████████████████████████████
██████
████████████████████████████
██████
███████████████████████████
██████
██████████████████████████
█████
███████████████████████████
█████████████
██████████████
████████████████████████████
█████████████████████████
██████████████████████
█████████████████
██████████

Monero
"The difference between bad and well-developed digital cash will determine
whether we have a dictatorship or a real democracy." 
David Chaum 1996
"Fungibility provides privacy as a side effect."  Adam Back 2014
Buy and sell XMR near you
P2P Exchange Network
Buy XMR with fiat
Is Dash a scam?
brg444 (OP)
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 644
Merit: 504

Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks


View Profile
October 03, 2015, 04:46:17 PM
 #1326

Three creative ways XTards are falsifying hash power in rent-a-hash and pay-per-hash schemes:

https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoinxt/comments/3natjy/stepbystep_instructions_for_how_to_rent_hashing/

https://www.bigblockbounty.com/

https://cryptoplay.net/vote/

Making sure these spoofed votes are overwhelmingly non-indicative of hash power.

Proof-of-work is proof of work done.  Unlike node count, it cannot be spoofed.

Miners (a) attempt to earn a profit with their hash power, and (b) express their acceptance of protocol rules by way they construct blocks and by the blocks upon which they mine.  When a miner points his hash power at a pool, he forfeits (b).  When a miner points his hash power at NiceHash (the hash renting service), he sells (b) to the highest bidder (who right now are people who want BIP101 blocks mined).  

This is an example of a market becoming more efficient.  If NiceHash didn't exists, some of those same people would eventually purchase physical hash power, resulting (eventually) in a similar outcome (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coase_theorem).

Cloud mining is a scam. You are promoting a scam that will lose people money in support of a project that is already on its deathbed.

"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
Peter R
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1162
Merit: 1007



View Profile
October 03, 2015, 04:54:48 PM
 #1327

Three creative ways XTards are falsifying hash power in rent-a-hash and pay-per-hash schemes:

https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoinxt/comments/3natjy/stepbystep_instructions_for_how_to_rent_hashing/

https://www.bigblockbounty.com/

https://cryptoplay.net/vote/

Making sure these spoofed votes are overwhelmingly non-indicative of hash power.

Proof-of-work is proof of work done.  Unlike node count, it cannot be spoofed.

Miners (a) attempt to earn a profit with their hash power, and (b) express their acceptance of protocol rules by way they construct blocks and by the blocks upon which they mine.  When a miner points his hash power at a pool, he forfeits (b).  When a miner points his hash power at NiceHash (the hash renting service), he sells (b) to the highest bidder (who right now are people who want BIP101 blocks mined).  

This is an example of a market becoming more efficient.  If NiceHash didn't exists, some of those same people would eventually purchase physical hash power, resulting (eventually) in a similar outcome (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coase_theorem).

Cloud mining is a scam. You are promoting a scam that will lose people money in support of a project that is already on its deathbed.

This actually isn't cloud mining (at least not in the traditional sense); it's a hash power market not unlike similar markets for electricity.  I haven't used the service yet, and I've been hesitant for the reasons you say.  However jtoomin from Toomin Bros. Mining (the group that has mined several of the recent BIP101 blocks) can see that NiceHash is indeed pointing the rented hash power at its pool.  So it appears NiceHash does what it claims to do.

https://www.nicehash.com

Run Bitcoin Unlimited (www.bitcoinunlimited.info)
brg444 (OP)
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 644
Merit: 504

Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks


View Profile
October 03, 2015, 04:59:09 PM
 #1328

Three creative ways XTards are falsifying hash power in rent-a-hash and pay-per-hash schemes:

https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoinxt/comments/3natjy/stepbystep_instructions_for_how_to_rent_hashing/

https://www.bigblockbounty.com/

https://cryptoplay.net/vote/

Making sure these spoofed votes are overwhelmingly non-indicative of hash power.

Proof-of-work is proof of work done.  Unlike node count, it cannot be spoofed.

Miners (a) attempt to earn a profit with their hash power, and (b) express their acceptance of protocol rules by way they construct blocks and by the blocks upon which they mine.  When a miner points his hash power at a pool, he forfeits (b).  When a miner points his hash power at NiceHash (the hash renting service), he sells (b) to the highest bidder (who right now are people who want BIP101 blocks mined).  

This is an example of a market becoming more efficient.  If NiceHash didn't exists, some of those same people would eventually purchase physical hash power, resulting (eventually) in a similar outcome (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coase_theorem).

Cloud mining is a scam. You are promoting a scam that will lose people money in support of a project that is already on its deathbed.

This actually isn't cloud mining; it's a hash power market not unlike similar markets for electricity.  I haven't used the service yet, and I've been hesitant for the reasons you say.  However jtoomin from Toomin Bros. Mining (the group that has mined several of the recent BIP101 blocks) can see that NiceHash is indeed pointing the rented hash power at its pool.  So it appears NiceHash indeed does what it claims to do.

 Roll Eyes

Quote
Welcome to NiceHash, the most advanced crypto currency cloud mining, hash rental service and multipool.

I mean look at the fucking website, if that doesn't scream scam to you.............https://www.nicehash.com

They even have the token 5 $ fiverr motion graphic...

"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
muyuu
Donator
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 980
Merit: 1000



View Profile
October 03, 2015, 05:01:28 PM
 #1329

Three creative ways XTards are falsifying hash power in rent-a-hash and pay-per-hash schemes:

https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoinxt/comments/3natjy/stepbystep_instructions_for_how_to_rent_hashing/

https://www.bigblockbounty.com/

https://cryptoplay.net/vote/

Making sure these spoofed votes are overwhelmingly non-indicative of hash power.

Proof-of-work is proof of work done.  Unlike node count, it cannot be spoofed.

Miners (a) attempt to earn a profit with their hash power, and (b) express their acceptance of protocol rules by way they construct blocks and by the blocks upon which they mine.  When a miner points his hash power at a pool, he forfeits (b).  When a miner points his hash power at NiceHash (the hash renting service), he sells (b) to the highest bidder (who right now are people who want BIP101 blocks mined).  

This is an example of a market becoming more efficient.  If NiceHash didn't exists, some of those same people would eventually purchase physical hash power, resulting (eventually) in a similar outcome (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coase_theorem).

Again you have no idea of what you're talking about and you are rambling on your spherical cows, which as a mathematician CS annoys me, you are adding to the stereotype.

PoW is legit, nobody is denying that, but version bits are being spoofed. This adds to the already known possibility that a version-bit based trigger scheme might get activated without the actual hashing power backing running what they say they are running.

Also, as others mentioned, cloud mining and hash markets are chock-full with scams and exit-scam schemes. The standard is not offering any guarantees or leverage, which in an unregulated market means what we already should know. Still in 2015 people don't seem to grasp the difference of operating in de-facto unregulated Bitcoin.

As a miner this nonsense makes me laugh, but I do worry about the uncertainty it may cause and at the money it can lose to unsuspecting people in various ways.

And with all that, 0.6%.

GPG ID: 7294199D - OTC ID: muyuu (470F97EB7294199D)
forum tea fund BTC 1Epv7KHbNjYzqYVhTCgXWYhGSkv7BuKGEU DOGE DF1eTJ2vsxjHpmmbKu9jpqsrg5uyQLWksM CAP F1MzvmmHwP2UhFq82NQT7qDU9NQ8oQbtkQ
brg444 (OP)
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 644
Merit: 504

Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks


View Profile
October 03, 2015, 05:04:29 PM
 #1330

Three creative ways XTards are falsifying hash power in rent-a-hash and pay-per-hash schemes:

https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoinxt/comments/3natjy/stepbystep_instructions_for_how_to_rent_hashing/

https://www.bigblockbounty.com/

https://cryptoplay.net/vote/

Making sure these spoofed votes are overwhelmingly non-indicative of hash power.

Proof-of-work is proof of work done.  Unlike node count, it cannot be spoofed.

Miners (a) attempt to earn a profit with their hash power, and (b) express their acceptance of protocol rules by way they construct blocks and by the blocks upon which they mine.  When a miner points his hash power at a pool, he forfeits (b).  When a miner points his hash power at NiceHash (the hash renting service), he sells (b) to the highest bidder (who right now are people who want BIP101 blocks mined).  

This is an example of a market becoming more efficient.  If NiceHash didn't exists, some of those same people would eventually purchase physical hash power, resulting (eventually) in a similar outcome (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coase_theorem).

Again you have no idea of what you're talking about and you are rambling on your spherical cows, which as a mathematician CS annoys me, you are adding to the stereotype.

PoW is legit, nobody is denying that, but version bits are being spoofed. This adds to the already known possibility that a version-bit based trigger scheme might get activated without the actual hashing power backing running what they say they are running.

Also, as others mentioned, cloud mining and hash markets are chock-full with scams and exit-scam schemes. The standard is not offering any guarantees or leverage, which in an unregulated market means what we already should know. Still in 2015 people don't seem to grasp the difference of operating in de-facto unregulated Bitcoin.

As a miner this nonsense makes me laugh, but I do worry about the uncertainty it may cause and at the money it can lose to unsuspecting people in various ways.

And with all that, 0.6%.

This desperation level is something never seen before  Cheesy

"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
Peter R
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1162
Merit: 1007



View Profile
October 03, 2015, 05:07:21 PM
 #1331

Quote
Welcome to NiceHash, the most advanced crypto currency cloud mining, hash rental service and multipool.

I mean look at the fucking website, if that doesn't scream scam to you.............https://www.nicehash.com

They even have the token 5 $ fiverr motion graphic...

You quoted me before I added the parenthetical remark "at least not cloud mining in the traditional sense." It's unfortunate they use the term cloud mining on the website, due to its negative connotation.  

The idea behind NiceHash is that entities can sell hash power into the pool, and that entities can purchase hash power from the pool and direct it as they see fit.  Like I said, this can be interpreted as hashers selling their right to "vote with their hash power" to people who want to vote but don't also want to run mining hardware.  

Assuming that the service works as advertised, would you still consider it a scam?

Run Bitcoin Unlimited (www.bitcoinunlimited.info)
Peter R
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1162
Merit: 1007



View Profile
October 03, 2015, 05:10:13 PM
 #1332

Also, as others mentioned, cloud mining and hash markets are chock-full with scams and exit-scam schemes. The standard is not offering any guarantees or leverage, which in an unregulated market means what we already should know. Still in 2015 people don't seem to grasp the difference of operating in de-facto unregulated Bitcoin.

Assuming NiceHash works as advertised (you actually get what you pay for and they don't exit scam), would you still consider it a scam?  

In other words, would you consider legitimate markets for buying and selling hash power to be a scam?  If so, why?

Run Bitcoin Unlimited (www.bitcoinunlimited.info)
brg444 (OP)
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 644
Merit: 504

Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks


View Profile
October 03, 2015, 05:16:28 PM
 #1333

Also, as others mentioned, cloud mining and hash markets are chock-full with scams and exit-scam schemes. The standard is not offering any guarantees or leverage, which in an unregulated market means what we already should know. Still in 2015 people don't seem to grasp the difference of operating in de-facto unregulated Bitcoin.

Assuming NiceHash works as advertised (you actually get what you pay for and they don't exit scam), would you still consider it a scam?  

In other words, would you consider legitimate markets for buying and selling hash power to be a scam?  If so, why?

Most scams usually pretend to "work as advertised" until they don't and then.... it's gone

"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
Peter R
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1162
Merit: 1007



View Profile
October 03, 2015, 05:17:38 PM
 #1334

Also, as others mentioned, cloud mining and hash markets are chock-full with scams and exit-scam schemes. The standard is not offering any guarantees or leverage, which in an unregulated market means what we already should know. Still in 2015 people don't seem to grasp the difference of operating in de-facto unregulated Bitcoin.

Assuming NiceHash works as advertised (you actually get what you pay for and they don't exit scam), would you still consider it a scam?  

In other words, would you consider legitimate markets for buying and selling hash power to be a scam?  If so, why?

Most scams usually pretend to "work as advertised" until they don't and then.... it's gone

That's not my question. 

My question is: would you consider legitimate markets for buying and selling hash power to be a scam?  If so, why?

Run Bitcoin Unlimited (www.bitcoinunlimited.info)
brg444 (OP)
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 644
Merit: 504

Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks


View Profile
October 03, 2015, 05:22:32 PM
 #1335

Also, as others mentioned, cloud mining and hash markets are chock-full with scams and exit-scam schemes. The standard is not offering any guarantees or leverage, which in an unregulated market means what we already should know. Still in 2015 people don't seem to grasp the difference of operating in de-facto unregulated Bitcoin.

Assuming NiceHash works as advertised (you actually get what you pay for and they don't exit scam), would you still consider it a scam?  

In other words, would you consider legitimate markets for buying and selling hash power to be a scam?  If so, why?

Most scams usually pretend to "work as advertised" until they don't and then.... it's gone

That's not my question.  

My question is: would you consider legitimate markets for buying and selling hash power to be a scam?  If so, why?

Considering there is absolutely no way to get any kind of return on your investment I'd say it is most definitely a scam.

They're straight up ponzi schemes.

"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
Peter R
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1162
Merit: 1007



View Profile
October 03, 2015, 05:29:23 PM
 #1336

My question is: would you consider legitimate markets for buying and selling hash power to be a scam?  If so, why?

Considering there is absolutely no way to get any kind of return on your investment I'd say it is most definitely a scam.

Thank you for answering.

I disagree of course.  Entities selling hash power would earn slightly more on average than pointing their equipment at a pool (so sellers do have an ROI advantage).  This bonus is paid for by entities buying hash power as a way to express their vote.  In other words, what we're seeing is a market emerge for the ability to construct blocks according to one's volition.  

Constructing blocks according to one's volition has value; it's how Bitcoin's consensus mechanism works and evolves.  

Run Bitcoin Unlimited (www.bitcoinunlimited.info)
brg444 (OP)
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 644
Merit: 504

Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks


View Profile
October 03, 2015, 05:37:49 PM
 #1337

My question is: would you consider legitimate markets for buying and selling hash power to be a scam?  If so, why?

Considering there is absolutely no way to get any kind of return on your investment I'd say it is most definitely a scam.

Thank you for answering.

I disagree of course.  Entities selling hash power would earn slightly more on average than pointing their equipment at a pool (so sellers do have an ROI advantage).  This bonus is paid for by entities buying hash power as a way to express their vote.  In other words, what we're seeing is a market emerge for the ability to construct blocks according to one's volition.  

Constructing blocks according to one's volition has value; it's how Bitcoin's consensus mechanism works and evolves.  

 Huh

Of course I'm referring to the buyer's ROI.

The nonsense you just typed has nothing to do with the reason for the existence of cloud mining services ponzis. Literally no one but XT retards are buying cloud mining to "construct blocks according to one's volition".

The simple pretense that these shenanigans would somehow move the needle in the balance of power is asinine and for you to defend such a scheme shows how desperate you and your gang are.

There is no "vote" Peter and what you describe has nothing to do with Bitcoin's consensus mechanism.

"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
iCEBREAKER
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2156
Merit: 1072


Crypto is the separation of Power and State.


View Profile WWW
October 03, 2015, 05:45:33 PM
 #1338

Three creative ways XTards are falsifying hash power in rent-a-hash and pay-per-hash schemes:

https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoinxt/comments/3natjy/stepbystep_instructions_for_how_to_rent_hashing/

https://www.bigblockbounty.com/

https://cryptoplay.net/vote/

Making sure these spoofed votes are overwhelmingly non-indicative of hash power.

Proof-of-work is proof of work done.  Unlike node count, it cannot be spoofed.

Again you have no idea of what you're talking about and you are rambling on your spherical cows, which as a mathematician CS annoys me, you are adding to the stereotype.

PoW is legit, nobody is denying that, but version bits are being spoofed. This adds to the already known possibility that a version-bit based trigger scheme might get activated without the actual hashing power backing running what they say they are running.

"HURR DURR proof-of-work cannot be spoofed, therefore it is impossible for blocks to have faked version bits."

/PR logic fail

Peter R seems to have no idea how Bitcoin mining/pools actually work.  I asked him if he's ever mined so much as a single BTC.  No response...

Can you believe that such fucktard was allowed to speak at #ScalingBitcoin?  Maybe they invited him because he makes Team XT look like fools!   Cool


██████████
█████████████████
██████████████████████
█████████████████████████
████████████████████████████
████
████████████████████████
█████
███████████████████████████
█████
███████████████████████████
██████
████████████████████████████
██████
████████████████████████████
██████
████████████████████████████
██████
███████████████████████████
██████
██████████████████████████
█████
███████████████████████████
█████████████
██████████████
████████████████████████████
█████████████████████████
██████████████████████
█████████████████
██████████

Monero
"The difference between bad and well-developed digital cash will determine
whether we have a dictatorship or a real democracy." 
David Chaum 1996
"Fungibility provides privacy as a side effect."  Adam Back 2014
Buy and sell XMR near you
P2P Exchange Network
Buy XMR with fiat
Is Dash a scam?
brg444 (OP)
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 644
Merit: 504

Bitcoin replaces central, not commercial, banks


View Profile
October 03, 2015, 06:00:33 PM
 #1339

In other words, what we're seeing is a market emerge for the ability to construct blocks according to one's volition.  

My sides still hurt from this one  Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy seriously..... Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy

"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
hdbuck
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1260
Merit: 1002



View Profile
October 03, 2015, 06:59:54 PM
 #1340

In other words, what we're seeing is a market emerge for the ability to construct blocks according to one's volition. 

My sides still hurt from this one  Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy seriously..... Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy

Lmao

Wtf is he even on? Trippin balls!

Cheesy Cheesy
Pages: « 1 ... 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 [67] 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 ... 227 »
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!