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Lauda
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Terminated.
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February 28, 2016, 11:07:51 AM |
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You're asking a weird question here. Are you not aware that Bitcoin is pseudo-anonymous? How could somebody know who's sending from random address X to address Y? This is an example of a 'bogus' address; i.e. you send Bitcoins there if you want to 'destroy' them. Read more: How to destroy bitcoins?.
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"The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks" 😼 Bitcoin Core ( onion)
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ProfessionalGoogler
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February 28, 2016, 11:08:15 AM |
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Uhhhhhhhhh.. weird that is a lot of BTC.
Surely no one actually owns this address.
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amaclin (OP)
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February 28, 2016, 11:13:44 AM |
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I mean that some public service uses this address as burning address like 1CounterpartyXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXUWLpVr Proof-of-Burn http://counterparty.io/news/why-proof-of-burn/May be you know more. So, I am asking here
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--Encrypted--
Copper Member
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hee-ho.
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February 28, 2016, 11:20:58 AM |
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which services does that? (in case you forgot you asked this in OP.)
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netplus
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February 28, 2016, 11:26:08 AM |
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oh Hash 160 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
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netplus
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February 28, 2016, 11:29:12 AM |
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amaclin (OP)
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February 28, 2016, 11:29:54 AM |
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Hash 160 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
This is not a problem Take zero-hash, and convert it to a bitcoin-address You will get a valid address to send funds but you will not be able to withdraw funds from it
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pereira4
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February 28, 2016, 01:24:28 PM |
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There are a lot of weird people with a lot of BTC out there OP... we will never find a logical explanation for that. Maybe they are reading this thread right now and having a laugh at your confusion, and that's why they do it. Or maybe they are just simply and legitimately moving coins there because they all belong to the same owner and he wants to store all the coins on the same address which is pretty stupid specially when the address is so recognizable. Yeah I cant find an explanation.
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unamis76
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February 28, 2016, 01:30:52 PM |
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The answer to your question is pretty simple: folks sending coins there are people who do not value their Bitcoins.
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European Central Bank
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February 28, 2016, 01:35:35 PM |
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I'm curious about these burn addresses. Is there a verifiable way of knowing that the private keys are lost? Sounds like a beautiful long con to me.
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U2
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February 28, 2016, 01:41:17 PM |
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If you look through a few pages you can see most transactions are BTC0.00025 BTC0.00000625 or BTC0.001. I'd have to assume a lot of these are the same person/people (recently anyways).
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BitcoinHodler
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February 28, 2016, 01:46:59 PM |
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I'm curious about these burn addresses. Is there a verifiable way of knowing that the private keys are lost? Sounds like a beautiful long con to me.
the private keys are not lost. there are no private keys for these addresses to be lost. these addresses are created without private keys. there is no way in hell someone can create a (custom) bitcoin address with all the computing power in the world combined.
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Holding Bitcoin More Every Day
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trinaldao
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Post your ann & bounty just contact me
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February 28, 2016, 01:49:58 PM |
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no people know it same threadotherHash 160 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
This is not a problem Take zero-hash, and convert it to a bitcoin-address You will get a valid address to send funds but you will not be able to withdraw funds from it so no people can send this money? this bitcoin
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INVALID BBCODE: close of unopened tag in table (1)
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RussianRaibow
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February 28, 2016, 02:20:24 PM |
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I'm curious about these burn addresses. Is there a verifiable way of knowing that the private keys are lost? Sounds like a beautiful long con to me.
The "proof" that nobody has the private key is in the public address itself. The possibility of someone generating an address (from the private key) that starts with 21 ones is practically 0.
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I AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMERI AM A SCAMMER
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European Central Bank
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February 28, 2016, 02:25:18 PM |
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I'm curious about these burn addresses. Is there a verifiable way of knowing that the private keys are lost? Sounds like a beautiful long con to me.
The "proof" that nobody has the private key is in the public address itself. The possibility of someone generating an address (from the private key) that starts with 21 ones is practically 0. Ok. You'll have to hold my hand a little here. Don't all addresses have a private key somewhere along the line? I assumed that someone generated it, ended up with a private key and then declared it destroyed. Sounds like you're saying that isn't possible. Can you explain it a little more?
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amaclin (OP)
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February 28, 2016, 02:31:49 PM |
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Hugroll
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February 28, 2016, 02:40:27 PM |
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its just people trying to destroy bitcoin, they do this by sending to an address that no one has the private key for. although i don't understand why they would do that lol.
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Mickeyb
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February 28, 2016, 02:41:57 PM |
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Ok. You'll have to hold my hand a little here. Don't all addresses have a private key somewhere along the line? I assumed that someone generated it, ended up with a private key and then declared it destroyed.
Yes the address does have a priv key, but it isn't available/known to anyone. This post should explain it better than me: You can't just make up an address by typing in whatever you want or even by typing in whatever you want from the allowed characters. The address must meet certain mathematical requirements, but you can make an address that mostly looks like what you want and then finish it off by calculating for those mathematical requirements. I'm sure this is explained much better in the thread I linked to in the first reply to the OP.
Technical version: The address I added in the first reply in the OP ends with f59kuE. That isn't just random gibberish the first person to send to that address made up. All or part of that is the checksum (mathematical verification that the address is valid). The checksum is what prevents you from making something up completely, and it exists primarily to prevent accidental spends to typo addresses (it isn't technically required, but because it exists, it is extremely unlikely that you can type an address wrong and send coins). The address also must only contain valid characters as defined by base-58 encoding, which prevents that particular address from being all caps (uppercase o and i are not allowed in base-58).
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DannyHamilton
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February 28, 2016, 02:42:29 PM |
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I assumed that someone generated it, ended up with a private key and then declared it destroyed.
You start by generating the private key. Then you calculate the public bitcoin address from that private key. The results of that calculation are completely unpredictable, so for any given private key the resulting address will be one of 2 160 possible bitcoin addresses, and which address it will be is completely unknown until you calculate it. So, if you start by wanting a specific address, all you can do is keep trying different private keys and see if the resulting bitcoin addresses match the address that you want. Since each private key has a 1 in 2 160 chance of being the address that you want, you have a 0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000684% chance of finding the private key for that specific address each time you try. You have a better chance of winning a major national lottery (such as the PowerBall in the U.S.) multiple times in a row than you do of starting with a specific desired bitcoin address and stumbling on the correct private key in your lifetime.
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