suchmoon (OP)
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September 10, 2015, 10:26:50 PM Last edit: November 28, 2020, 05:36:48 AM by suchmoon |
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Meet the BOI. I don't think this part of the website is available without logging in: Edited 2020-11-28 to fix a broken image
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Phildo
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September 11, 2015, 01:01:08 PM |
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Do you have access to the see what addresses the coins are being staked in so you can see the proof that staking is happening since you lit your $1 on fire.
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suchmoon (OP)
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September 11, 2015, 01:21:19 PM Last edit: September 11, 2015, 02:08:17 PM by suchmoon |
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Do you have access to the see what addresses the coins are being staked in so you can see the proof that staking is happening since you lit your $1 on fire.
Addresses are not posted on the website but they did post them a while ago on the GH forum. I did some digging and yes, they are staking but the total balance is less than the 107 BTC claimed on the site. Waiting for cyberpinoy to explain it. https://forum.gethashing.com/t/pos-mining-stakeminers/3925/1232
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Phildo
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September 11, 2015, 01:45:07 PM |
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I assumed they would be easy to find if you logged in because when I asked cyberpinoy he said that everything was on the website and locked his thread.
I'm not shocked.
That's the biggest problem with this whole operation. It may be an ok idea, and it's trivially easy to do it in a straight up and transparent manner. The fact that it is neither should scare people.
I also like how half i tied up in 1 coin when they claim that diversification will protect them from price volatility, what a joke. We've officially reached the point where it's on you if you lose money in this shit show.
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suchmoon (OP)
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September 11, 2015, 02:00:58 PM |
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suchmoon (OP)
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September 11, 2015, 02:04:26 PM |
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Looking at those screenshots I realized a couple of things. At least one wallet (OKcash) has multiple staking addresses. That may account for some of the difference but I don't know how much exactly. And there is a Ratecoin wallet with a balance visible in the screenshot so I'll add that to my calculations.
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vancefox
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September 11, 2015, 03:48:25 PM |
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So...
What exactly is the difference between having your own coins in your own wallet and giving them to him?
The only advantage I see is if you have less than the number of coins recommended for one single block in order to achieve a stake within a period of time that you think is reasonable. The problem with this is all the PoS coins are not exactly expensive...
With that said, there are plenty of businesses that rely on ignorance and/or laziness of the masses so that shouldn't be held against him.
From the little I've seen, and because I myself am too lazy to bother and research this, I don't see this as anything else but someone offering (for a price) their own wallet for those that either can't or won't use their own.
If you have your own wallet(s) and know the basic concepts of their use you will most likely not use this "company". If you don't have the ability or knowledge required to have your own wallets you'll probably use something like this.
Just my opinion...
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vancefox
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September 11, 2015, 03:58:18 PM |
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Sorry for doubling the post but my above post is one topic... and this is another...
That's an awful lot of people involved in a project that is only worth by their own accounting of 107BTC, assuming this is what was claimed, translating to (@ $246/BTC) only 26k USD and some change...
For 6 executive officers and 4 trusties and assuming a 4% realistic return on the coins invested per month (I know, very kind) that's only a gross revenue of just over 1k USD per month...
Since I don't know how much is personal and how much is client I won't expand beyond the simple facts but even if that 1k was all internal that would relate to an even distribution of 100 USD per month... not exactly enough to be considered a salary IMO... unless you're living in a 3rd world country with no or limited access to potable water and your house is made of fig leaves (not saying anything bad against the 3rd world areas... just stating realistic living conditions.
With the number of people involved I was kind of expecting to see more like 1000-5000 BTC total...
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suchmoon (OP)
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September 11, 2015, 04:40:57 PM Last edit: November 28, 2020, 05:37:50 AM by suchmoon |
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Sorry for doubling the post but my above post is one topic... and this is another...
That's an awful lot of people involved in a project that is only worth by their own accounting of 107BTC, assuming this is what was claimed, translating to (@ $246/BTC) only 26k USD and some change...
For 6 executive officers and 4 trusties and assuming a 4% realistic return on the coins invested per month (I know, very kind) that's only a gross revenue of just over 1k USD per month...
Since I don't know how much is personal and how much is client I won't expand beyond the simple facts but even if that 1k was all internal that would relate to an even distribution of 100 USD per month... not exactly enough to be considered a salary IMO... unless you're living in a 3rd world country with no or limited access to potable water and your house is made of fig leaves (not saying anything bad against the 3rd world areas... just stating realistic living conditions.
With the number of people involved I was kind of expecting to see more like 1000-5000 BTC total...
Despite the fancy titles those are volunteer positions. Even cyberpinoy himself claims to be making money from his own investment and is not taking a salary. His investment is ~11 BTC in case you're wondering. https://forum.gethashing.com/t/pos-mining-stakeminers/3925/781Edited 2020-11-28 to fix a broken image
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Phildo
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September 11, 2015, 04:54:37 PM |
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So...
What exactly is the difference between having your own coins in your own wallet and giving them to him?
The only advantage I see is if you have less than the number of coins recommended for one single block in order to achieve a stake within a period of time that you think is reasonable. The problem with this is all the PoS coins are not exactly expensive...
With that said, there are plenty of businesses that rely on ignorance and/or laziness of the masses so that shouldn't be held against him.
From the little I've seen, and because I myself am too lazy to bother and research this, I don't see this as anything else but someone offering (for a price) their own wallet for those that either can't or won't use their own.
If you have your own wallet(s) and know the basic concepts of their use you will most likely not use this "company". If you don't have the ability or knowledge required to have your own wallets you'll probably use something like this.
Just my opinion...
The more coins you have in a wallet the more coins you can stake, so putting your coins into a bigger pot to stake will generate you a bigger return than keeping them yourself, so 1 wallet with 100 coins in it will stake more coins overall than 10 wallets with 10 coins each combined. That is where this could make sense. I get a bunch of people to put a bunch of coin x into the same wallet so that we will get a bigger return together than we could all get on their own. The problem with this is that they are collecting and distributing btc. What they do with the btc can be done transparently and clearly, but they don't do that. If I got a bunch of people to stake coin x and the coin crashed, we lose, but we knew what we were getting in to with coin x, so that's on us. in this system, you don't have control over what coins are staked, so you are relying on someone who locks threads and possibly lies about his crypto experience to distribute the coins properly. My biggest concern is that by without allowing users/prospective investors to see the wallets on blockchains, there is nothing stopping someone with questionable integrity from scamming. Imagine the price of TEK goes from 2500 satoshi to 1500 satoshi, what is stopping stakeminers from saying they had 50 btc in TEK and pocketing the rest for themselves?
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vancefox
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September 11, 2015, 05:34:11 PM |
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The more coins you have in a wallet the more coins you can stake, so putting your coins into a bigger pot to stake will generate you a bigger return than keeping them yourself, so 1 wallet with 100 coins in it will stake more coins overall than 10 wallets with 10 coins each combined. That is where this could make sense. I get a bunch of people to put a bunch of coin x into the same wallet so that we will get a bigger return together than we could all get on their own.
The problem with this is that they are collecting and distributing btc. What they do with the btc can be done transparently and clearly, but they don't do that. If I got a bunch of people to stake coin x and the coin crashed, we lose, but we knew what we were getting in to with coin x, so that's on us. in this system, you don't have control over what coins are staked, so you are relying on someone who locks threads and possibly lies about his crypto experience to distribute the coins properly.
My biggest concern is that by without allowing users/prospective investors to see the wallets on blockchains, there is nothing stopping someone with questionable integrity from scamming. Imagine the price of TEK goes from 2500 satoshi to 1500 satoshi, what is stopping stakeminers from saying they had 50 btc in TEK and pocketing the rest for themselves?
While I do understand the premise of pooling coins the effects would only be vastly realized if, and only if, difficulty rises to a point where an "average" wallet will not stake. One coin that is a prime example of this is HYP, and to another extent his new ratecoin project (from what I see as I bought in and subsequently sold out after I realized this to be in effect). I have not pooled my coins and I have ~500k of them and only get one or two blocks per day on average. It is what it is and this coin would see a benefit to pooled staking. I've just decided to let the wallet go and see where the thing winds up. Coins that have a relatively low difficulty do not create any marked increase in stake. My 100k or so TEK blocks stake within an hour or so of achieving minimum coinage. Same with my HBN, CAP, and (to a lesser extent but still valid) CON. I guess I'm saying that the only thing I see this as is giving my coins to someone else to do the same thing that I could do but losing the primary rule for cryptocurrency... "trust no one". With the multitudes of scams and confidence men in this "industry" this mantra seems to be ignored by the very people who need to heed it most.
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suchmoon (OP)
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September 11, 2015, 05:43:59 PM |
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While I do understand the premise of pooling coins the effects would only be vastly realized if, and only if, difficulty rises to a point where an "average" wallet will not stake. One coin that is a prime example of this is HYP, and to another extent his new ratecoin project (from what I see as I bought in and subsequently sold out after I realized this to be in effect). I have not pooled my coins and I have ~500k of them and only get one or two blocks per day on average. It is what it is and this coin would see a benefit to pooled staking. I've just decided to let the wallet go and see where the thing winds up.
Coins that have a relatively low difficulty do not create any marked increase in stake. My 100k or so TEK blocks stake within an hour or so of achieving minimum coinage. Same with my HBN, CAP, and (to a lesser extent but still valid) CON.
I guess I'm saying that the only thing I see this as is giving my coins to someone else to do the same thing that I could do but losing the primary rule for cryptocurrency... "trust no one".
With the multitudes of scams and confidence men in this "industry" this mantra seems to be ignored by the very people who need to heed it most.
I don't have much experience with staking coins - other than XPY and CON of course - but this sounds like the old-school multipool mining. Instead of trying to solo-mine a bunch of coins, dealing with wallets, exchanges, etc you're delegating all that to a pool. Even if I CAN do that myself I can see how it would make sense to have someone do it for me. Obviously there is a problem. You don't gift your hardware to a mining multipool with the hope that they might give it back. You have to give your coins to a staking pool unless some kind of multisig solution could be implemented. This is even before we get into the inflationary economics of this thing. It's unsustainable to pay out the whole stake if the principal depreciates due to inflation. Although that part is somewhat similar to hardware depreciation it's not quite clear how a staking pool should handle it.
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vancefox
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September 11, 2015, 06:04:49 PM |
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I don't have much experience with staking coins - other than XPY and CON of course - but this sounds like the old-school multipool mining. Instead of trying to solo-mine a bunch of coins, dealing with wallets, exchanges, etc you're delegating all that to a pool. Even if I CAN do that myself I can see how it would make sense to have someone do it for me.
Obviously there is a problem. You don't gift your hardware to a mining multipool with the hope that they might give it back. You have to give your coins to a staking pool unless some kind of multisig solution could be implemented.
This is even before we get into the inflationary economics of this thing. It's unsustainable to pay out the whole stake if the principal depreciates due to inflation. Although that part is somewhat similar to hardware depreciation it's not quite clear how a staking pool should handle it.
Well what I can help you with is that some developers are integrating the idea of "pull a little bit of profit out of the exchange slowly" by building S4C (stake for charity) or multisend into their respective wallets. Basically what this allows is for a percentage of the stake to be sent to an exchange, presumably to sell for BTC. Obviously the only way to sustain this is to provide or create demand. If there is no widespread demand the coin's price will suffer (i.e. XPY). So... it all falls down to the only coins that are being staked on stakeminers (disclaimer: that I know of) that would benefit from pooled staking is HYP and XRA. And I wouldn't recommend those two coins, unless you're willing to buy >1m of each. And that minimum number continues to grow as difficulty does.
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dooglus
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September 11, 2015, 08:10:31 PM |
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The more coins you have in a wallet the more coins you can stake, so putting your coins into a bigger pot to stake will generate you a bigger return than keeping them yourself, so 1 wallet with 100 coins in it will stake more coins overall than 10 wallets with 10 coins each combined.
That is apparently true of Netcoin, up to a point(*). They actively encourage decentralisation by having large wallets stake disproportionately faster than smaller wallets. By doubling the size of your wallet you more than double the return from staking. That seems like a silly thing to incentivise, but that's what they do. I don't know if any other coins have the same. As I understand it, most don't. So why would we want to use a staking pool? 1. the pool runs all the wallets for us, saving us the trouble / bandwidth / disk space / maintenance / etc. of having to do it ourselves 2. pooling our resources reduces the variance; we achieve our expected return much more quickly than by solo staking 3. some coins stake better (ie. higher expected percentage return) the bigger the wallet balance is (eg. netcoin) and so pooling makes sense And why wouldn't we want to use a staking pool? 1. we have to trust a third party with our coins; there's no way of using multisig for staking coins, since in order to stake, the staking wallet needs to be able to sign a transaction with our private key; with the same private key the staking service can steal our coins 2. the staking service presumably takes some kind of fee (or 'penalty', call it what you will) which reduces our expected profit 3. if we were solo-staking, we could evaluate each coin and decide which one to invest in; with this setup it appears that such decision is made by the pool itself which leaves us vulnerable to manipulation (pool owner buys up some shitcoinX for himself, then buys a bunch of the same coin for the pool, then dumps his personal holdings at the pool's expense) These downsides could be alleviated to varying degrees, but the current lack of transparency and control really don't help potential investor confidence. (*) Netcoin balances stake better as they grow to 10 million, and then the growth stops. 10 million netcoin is current worth a little over $5000, which is probably more than most altcoin speculators are willing to hold in netcoin, and so there is clear pressure to pool. It appears that stakeminers already hold over 10 million netcoin, and so adding more won't increase their return, but from my point of view it does increase my return.
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Paul Revere
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The Scamcoats are coming!
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September 11, 2015, 10:33:41 PM |
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Meet the BOI. I don't think this part of the website is available without logging in: All those pictures and not a single thumb's up. Most definitely untrustworthy.
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All of my posts are simply statements of my own personal opinions based on available information and pondering what might be possible considering human nature, with the goal of finding truth and preventing fraud. Please look at all of the facts and theories and put your thinking cap on to draw your own conclusions. If you feel that I have made a false statement or have been unnecessarily derogatory, I encourage you to please point it out, and if proven correct and/or reasonable I will remedy it. ~ Paul Revere
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suchmoon (OP)
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September 17, 2015, 12:40:36 PM Last edit: November 28, 2020, 05:40:26 AM by suchmoon |
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cyberpinoy doesn't seem to think it's worth responding to explain the difference between the invested amounts stated on the website and the value of published assets. I was looking at some of the addresses more closely and noticed that for example the big one (NET) doesn't seem to have any recent withdrawals for payouts. I had the impression that the idea of a staking pool would be to put the coins into a wallet, stake, remove the staking proceeds / minted coins (perhaps in some sort of a fashion to avoid disrupting coinage too much), exchange to BTC, and pay out. Which raises a question now - if the wallet containing 50% of StakeMiners assets hasn't had a withdrawal for a month (since August 18) then where are the payouts coming from? And why is cyberpinoy putting half of his proverbial eggs into such a volatile coin? (Yes, I checked and he didn't sell any significant amounts when the price was 300+ sat so it looks like he's not using his Forex experience here) Edited 2020-11-28 to fix a broken imageEdited 2020-11-28 to fix a broken image
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dooglus
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September 17, 2015, 06:13:30 PM |
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[words] so it looks like he's not using his Forex experience here You're clearly a novice trader at best. Look at the right hand edge of the chart. Netcoin is exhibiting a very strong cock-n-balls "boner" formation, which is predictive of the price exploding upwards:
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suchmoon (OP)
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September 17, 2015, 06:25:51 PM |
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You're clearly a novice trader at best. Look at the right hand edge of the chart. Netcoin is exhibiting a very strong cock-n-balls "boner" formation, which is predictive of the price exploding upwards: https://i.imgur.com/G50RH2F.pngI thought it was Leroy giving the finger to his investors who dare to ask questions, but your explanation is much better. My 0.005 BTC investment is going to the moon.
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rdyoung
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September 18, 2015, 06:31:06 PM |
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[words] so it looks like he's not using his Forex experience here You're clearly a novice trader at best. Look at the right hand edge of the chart. Netcoin is exhibiting a very strong cock-n-balls "boner" formation, which is predictive of the price exploding upwards: Holy crap, I needed that laugh. Thank you dooglus
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stingleword
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Out of crypto entirely and don't miss it
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September 18, 2015, 10:23:55 PM |
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So why would we want to use a staking pool? And why wouldn't we want to use a staking pool?
Given this is a guy that operates a site that effectively doubles as a staking pool for its investors, he's probably worth paying attention to on the subject. This lends a lot of credibility to his next insight... You're clearly a novice trader at best. Look at the right hand edge of the chart. Netcoin is exhibiting a very strong cock-n-balls "boner" formation, which is predictive of the price exploding upwards: https://i.imgur.com/G50RH2F.png
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Crypto is dead, its community is a series of bad jokes.
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