jackg
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Merit: 3071
https://bit.ly/387FXHi lightning theory
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November 28, 2015, 10:31:28 PM Last edit: November 28, 2015, 10:49:42 PM by jackg |
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ya, with my member status, i have no chance. my old account was hero member, jdh015232, until it got hacked. i will be out of the industry for a good long time
Well, your potential activity is 168. You can become a full member in no time, and earn back a part of the coins you lost. i wish their was a way for theymos to combine my old activity from jdh015232 into this account, i tried to get my old account back after the hack, but i know it is hard on your end as their is no way to really do it and i could not verify the BTC address that i had back then. but if that were the case i could have a shot at reecouping some losses theymos can and has done that in the past. See here for details on recovering your account: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=497545.0it was not a scammer account, i got hacked, and the last few post from the guy he may have tried to scam someone. also, he hacked my account to get my NEM stake, which i told the NEM guys when it happened, and they reported my old account as a scam account so nobody else would fall for him. originally i used that account for a million differant things. to first learn about bitcoin and altcoins Well I can only go by what I see and your word really so can't comment further on whether you're telling the truth or not but people have often used the excuse of being hacked in the past after a failed scam attempt (though accounts being hacked to try scam from isn't impossible either). Hilariousandco, does the server keep a record of all of the IPs that have been running on it, if it does and this person has not changed his internet provider, then he will be able to get his account back! Alternatively, this user may have logged the IP he was running it on and protect it from this! If not, then this bit of information (i realise) is now useless! Thank you jack g Also: Was Gotapauj account (i think that was correct) suspected to be a hacked one!) What was the username of the account, or its UID?
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jdh015232
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November 28, 2015, 10:41:08 PM |
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If you want me to recover a hacked/lost account, you need to prove that you own it. Typically, the only acceptable method of proving ownership is by signing a message (including current date and desired new email address) using a Bitcoin address or PGP key associated with the account. A Bitcoin address or PGP key is associated with the account only if the account posted the key/address, sent it in a PM, or if it is still listed in the account's profile.
I very rarely recover accounts if you can't prove ownership as described above. There are alternative ways of proving ownership, but they take too much time. If I point you to this thread, you can't prove ownership properly, and then I ignore your future PMs, this means that I'm not going to recover your account. Create a new one.
this is my issue, i do not have control of any original bitcoin account i used to connect me to that forum account, so it is just my word vs whatever and i understand why i cannot get it back. i tried to go back through some of my old posts, and find an address that i still have control over that i mentioned somewhere on a post, and i beleive i found one(would have to do this research again) but last time they told me sorry, it wasnt enough info.
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saturn643
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November 28, 2015, 10:58:12 PM |
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jdh0152322 and hilariousandco, please take your off topic discussion about recovering accounts to meta. hilariousandco, you should know better, after all you are a global mod About the whois info, since the guy is using whoisguard and the information doesn't have to be real, it is not entirely reliable. Instead we need to contact the hosting and domain registrar that he used and ask them if they will give up information to help us find the guy.
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jdh015232
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November 29, 2015, 01:27:45 AM |
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jdh0152322 and hilariousandco, please take your off topic discussion about recovering accounts to meta. hilariousandco, you should know better, after all you are a global mod About the whois info, since the guy is using whoisguard and the information doesn't have to be real, it is not entirely reliable. Instead we need to contact the hosting and domain registrar that he used and ask them if they will give up information to help us find the guy. sorry i notice coins have not moved anymore since early morning....i am waiting.
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jdh015232
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November 29, 2015, 05:52:38 AM |
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ya, with my member status, i have no chance. my old account was hero member, jdh015232, until it got hacked. i will be out of the industry for a good long time
Well, your potential activity is 168. You can become a full member in no time, and earn back a part of the coins you lost. i wish their was a way for theymos to combine my old activity from jdh015232 into this account, i tried to get my old account back after the hack, but i know it is hard on your end as their is no way to really do it and i could not verify the BTC address that i had back then. but if that were the case i could have a shot at reecouping some losses theymos can and has done that in the past. See here for details on recovering your account: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=497545.0it was not a scammer account, i got hacked, and the last few post from the guy he may have tried to scam someone. also, he hacked my account to get my NEM stake, which i told the NEM guys when it happened, and they reported my old account as a scam account so nobody else would fall for him. originally i used that account for a million differant things. to first learn about bitcoin and altcoins Well I can only go by what I see and your word really so can't comment further on whether you're telling the truth or not but people have often used the excuse of being hacked in the past after a failed scam attempt (though accounts being hacked to try scam from isn't impossible either). hey guys, theymos and i worked it out, and i got my old account back!!! thanks for your help, i am very grateful. so i see funds have not moved still..i will be watching closely. what is the best way to tell if it is an exchange address?
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teddy5145
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November 29, 2015, 07:17:14 AM |
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ya, with my member status, i have no chance. my old account was hero member, jdh015232, until it got hacked. i will be out of the industry for a good long time
Well, your potential activity is 168. You can become a full member in no time, and earn back a part of the coins you lost. i wish their was a way for theymos to combine my old activity from jdh015232 into this account, i tried to get my old account back after the hack, but i know it is hard on your end as their is no way to really do it and i could not verify the BTC address that i had back then. but if that were the case i could have a shot at reecouping some losses theymos can and has done that in the past. See here for details on recovering your account: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=497545.0it was not a scammer account, i got hacked, and the last few post from the guy he may have tried to scam someone. also, he hacked my account to get my NEM stake, which i told the NEM guys when it happened, and they reported my old account as a scam account so nobody else would fall for him. originally i used that account for a million differant things. to first learn about bitcoin and altcoins Well I can only go by what I see and your word really so can't comment further on whether you're telling the truth or not but people have often used the excuse of being hacked in the past after a failed scam attempt (though accounts being hacked to try scam from isn't impossible either). hey guys, theymos and i worked it out, and i got my old account back!!! thanks for your help, i am very grateful. so i see funds have not moved still..i will be watching closely. what is the best way to tell if it is an exchange address? If that address held a bunch of coins from hundreds of addresses then it might be the exchange address Because many people deposited their coins to that address or the easiest way, contact the exchange and ask for list of their address
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Cebuu
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Merit: 11
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November 29, 2015, 09:13:40 AM |
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Very sad to see this scam...
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examplens
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Activity: 3444
Merit: 3471
Crypto Swap Exchange
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November 29, 2015, 09:24:38 AM |
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jdh0152322 and hilariousandco, please take your off topic discussion about recovering accounts to meta. hilariousandco, you should know better, after all you are a global mod About the whois info, since the guy is using whoisguard and the information doesn't have to be real, it is not entirely reliable. Instead we need to contact the hosting and domain registrar that he used and ask them if they will give up information to help us find the guy. I think the small possibility that hosting and domain registar you will give an information about owner of this domain. certainly it would be good to save somewhere whois info, I noticed a couple scamers always use the same method of operation
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allyouracid
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Activity: 2321
Merit: 1292
Encrypted Money, Baby!
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November 29, 2015, 12:42:02 PM |
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I received pm and got the shocked of my life when I learnt that the signature I am wearing and promoting turned out to be a scam.I am very disappointed that bitcointalk do not do any kind of investigation before allowing such campaigns.Now on the last day of campaign when we were expecting payouts,we come to know that it is a scam.Who is going to be at loss?obviously the members of this forum who were promoting it.All their efforts,time and energy gone wasted Lol, what kind of weird, twisted view do you have? First, you should be shocked that you didn't do any research before participating in this campaign. You cannot just hand over responsibilities that conveniently. Second: who will be at a loss? Those who were promoting? Are you fuckin kidding me? At a loss are those who clicked the links which you fuckin promoted. I really hope that your post was full of sarcasm, otherwise people like you are the reason scams like this one actually work.
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jdh015232
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November 29, 2015, 02:02:51 PM |
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so i see funds have moved, he is obviously running them through a mixer. so it will be hard to trace now. does anyone have access to better tools than myself and blockchain.info?? thanks
either that or he sent it to an exchange, can anyone identify? i cannot
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DiamondCardz
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November 29, 2015, 02:16:41 PM |
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jdh0152322 and hilariousandco, please take your off topic discussion about recovering accounts to meta. hilariousandco, you should know better, after all you are a global mod Oh clam up man, don't be a wanna-be. The discussion is perfectly fine and hilariousandco a) isn't even derailing the thread and b) knows what he's doing. jdh0152322 and hilariousandco, please take your off topic discussion about recovering accounts to meta. hilariousandco, you should know better, after all you are a global mod About the whois info, since the guy is using whoisguard and the information doesn't have to be real, it is not entirely reliable. Instead we need to contact the hosting and domain registrar that he used and ask them if they will give up information to help us find the guy. I think the small possibility that hosting and domain registar you will give an information about owner of this domain. certainly it would be good to save somewhere whois info, I noticed a couple scamers always use the same method of operation They should give the information if a scammer/fraudster was using their services, they'd have to via a subpoena anyway.
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BA Computer Science, University of Oxford Dissertation was about threat modelling on distributed ledgers.
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jdh015232
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November 29, 2015, 07:40:11 PM |
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i beleive the scammer is the owner of this wallet 3NcGhGBrRV4ZdGPTbNNYtJ8ef4PgBCggGi but could be wrong idk or 3Ai62ehTuGDcssLCVXkD51rZ2uYkHqxh8V is where the proceeds from this scam have ended up. not sure
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jdh015232
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November 30, 2015, 12:19:44 PM |
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seems it will be a dead end. oh well
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JonHolmquist
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Jon Holmquist
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November 30, 2015, 04:35:13 PM |
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Anyone taking the lead on tracking this guy down?
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jackg
Copper Member
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Activity: 2856
Merit: 3071
https://bit.ly/387FXHi lightning theory
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November 30, 2015, 06:48:42 PM Last edit: November 30, 2015, 10:13:30 PM by jackg |
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Anyone taking the lead on tracking this guy down?
Through some quick research, I found that this account was bought when it was a member account! It may not have the same owner as the one who bought it, but if anyone could tell us who bought it that would be useful. Meanwhile, I will try to find this information from the "marketplace" "digital goods" section! I think he has a facebook tm and twitter tm account, as I can track a GOTAPAUJ account linked with CRYPTO CURRENCIES on that Site!
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worhiper_-_
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November 30, 2015, 09:23:17 PM |
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Did people seriously send BTC to the fake ripoffs advertised there?
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FruitsBasket
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November 30, 2015, 09:28:36 PM |
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Did people seriously send BTC to the fake ripoffs advertised there?
Yes, ofcourse people were scammed. The site looked so real and stuff that you would not even think it was directing you to phising sites. I wanted to buy some stuff on bitcoin black friday, but i don't know why I did not do it. I think I am lucky that I haven't been scammed by the fake website. When I saw the signature campaign, a little bell was ringing because only casino's and that kind of buisinnes would promote themselves, not a simple website with links...
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fck@dt-alwayzz_newbz
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jackg
Copper Member
Legendary
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Activity: 2856
Merit: 3071
https://bit.ly/387FXHi lightning theory
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November 30, 2015, 10:11:33 PM |
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Did people seriously send BTC to the fake ripoffs advertised there?
Yes, ofcourse people were scammed. The site looked so real and stuff that you would not even think it was directing you to phising sites. I wanted to buy some stuff on bitcoin black friday, but i don't know why I did not do it. I think I am lucky that I haven't been scammed by the fake website. When I saw the signature campaign, a little bell was ringing because only casino's and that kind of buisinnes would promote themselves, not a simple website with links... ERM... I think you may have got the website wrong... They simply produced a website and allowed traders to sign up with them! They FOOLISHLY didn't check the legality of these sites, which means that they are now being condemned as spammers, when they were just selling advertising space from their site! They FOOLISHLY didn't realise that SCAMMERS HAVE MORE MONEY to spend as they DON'T ACTUALLY HAVE TO MAKE THE PRODUCTS THEY ARE SELLING! Hope this helps for a better analysis of the site and its develoopers. Jack G
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Holdaaja
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November 30, 2015, 10:13:51 PM |
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Did people seriously send BTC to the fake ripoffs advertised there?
Yes, ofcourse people were scammed. The site looked so real and stuff that you would not even think it was directing you to phising sites. I wanted to buy some stuff on bitcoin black friday, but i don't know why I did not do it. I think I am lucky that I haven't been scammed by the fake website. When I saw the signature campaign, a little bell was ringing because only casino's and that kind of buisinnes would promote themselves, not a simple website with links... ERM... I think you may have got the website wrong... They simply produced a website and allowed traders to sign up with them! They FOOLISHLY didn't check the legality of these sites, which means that they are now being condemned as spammers, when they were just selling advertising space from their site! They FOOLISHLY didn't realise that SCAMMERS HAVE MORE MONEY to spend as they DON'T ACTUALLY HAVE TO MAKE THE PRODUCTS THEY ARE SELLING! Hope this helps for a better analysis of the site and its develoopers. Jack G That could be true too but is there any proof the site owner didn't make those links?
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jackg
Copper Member
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Activity: 2856
Merit: 3071
https://bit.ly/387FXHi lightning theory
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November 30, 2015, 10:21:20 PM |
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Did people seriously send BTC to the fake ripoffs advertised there?
Yes, ofcourse people were scammed. The site looked so real and stuff that you would not even think it was directing you to phising sites. I wanted to buy some stuff on bitcoin black friday, but i don't know why I did not do it. I think I am lucky that I haven't been scammed by the fake website. When I saw the signature campaign, a little bell was ringing because only casino's and that kind of buisinnes would promote themselves, not a simple website with links... ERM... I think you may have got the website wrong... They simply produced a website and allowed traders to sign up with them! They FOOLISHLY didn't check the legality of these sites, which means that they are now being condemned as spammers, when they were just selling advertising space from their site! They FOOLISHLY didn't realise that SCAMMERS HAVE MORE MONEY to spend as they DON'T ACTUALLY HAVE TO MAKE THE PRODUCTS THEY ARE SELLING! Hope this helps for a better analysis of the site and its develoopers. Jack G That could be true too but is there any proof the site owner didn't make those links? YES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! If he did make this site, and manipulated everything in his favour, It wouldn't have run so smoothly! Also, those are basic phishing sites. (did he create localbircoins.com, localbiecoins.com... ETC! You cannot pin all of the fishing sites related to that on him (though it would be easy to carry out!) PEOPLE SHOULD BE MORE CLEVER WITH THEIR BITCOINS! I find it a good idea to log into an account, on the official site, remembering me, clicking on the other link and if I am still logged in on the other link in the same browser site, then (to me) it appears slightly more legit!
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