GPU Rigs
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April 16, 2013, 04:44:51 PM |
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The WHOIS information on DragonASIC is domains by proxy... GoDaddys privacy service, a lot of companies use that for a variety of reasons including political websites. Because that whois information matches to other known scam sites, in reality, means very little. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domains_by_ProxyThey could equally be a legit company wanting to shield their business location or a scam company, the WHOIS information in this specific instance is basically worthless. In effect, you have labeled a company as a 'scam' because you personally feel their WHOIS info is unreputable, despite there being millions of websites with the exact same WHOIS information.
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Operatr (OP)
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April 16, 2013, 05:46:56 PM |
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While I can appreciate what you're trying to do, failing to make a distinction between a hardware vendor and a vaporware vendor is dangerous. By listing both BFL and Avalon as green you're steering those reading this thread to BFL as Avalon does batch shipping and is unavailable. The bottomless pit of orders BFL takes in makes it unclear how long one could potentially wait to receive a product ordered today.
Avalon and BFL have both shipped products that are confirmed in the hands of end users, making them a safer bet than most. Again, safer. Not irrefutable proof they wont screw you. This is opposed to some random Easybake website registered by random people with no proof at all what they claim is true or ever will be. BFL has some issues with their new line, but they have shipped in the past, have a real office people on these forums have been to, etc. As noted this page is informational only, if you choose to use it to influence your buying decisions I am not liable for the end result. This is to gather up all speculation and fact in one spot, make your own judgement. This is largely opinion based by me, I agree. As noted any of these companies can contact me directly to clear themselves. It isnt perfect but better than letting speculation run wild and be completely confusing to everyone, and mitigate "is it a scam?" posts. The WHOIS information on DragonASIC is domains by proxy... GoDaddys privacy service, a lot of companies use that for a variety of reasons including political websites. Because that whois information matches to other known scam sites, in reality, means very little. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domains_by_ProxyThey could equally be a legit company wanting to shield their business location or a scam company, the WHOIS information in this specific instance is basically worthless. In effect, you have labeled a company as a 'scam' because you personally feel their WHOIS info is unreputable, despite there being millions of websites with the exact same WHOIS information. It is not the registrar itself that raises plenty of suspicion, it is the real address it is attached to. A web search of it digs up a few examples of scam sites being generated by whatever it is, based on that I would not give them your money over BFL or Avalon at present.
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GPU Rigs
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April 16, 2013, 06:08:14 PM Last edit: April 16, 2013, 06:19:07 PM by GPU Rigs |
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While I can appreciate what you're trying to do, failing to make a distinction between a hardware vendor and a vaporware vendor is dangerous. By listing both BFL and Avalon as green you're steering those reading this thread to BFL as Avalon does batch shipping and is unavailable. The bottomless pit of orders BFL takes in makes it unclear how long one could potentially wait to receive a product ordered today.
Avalon and BFL have both shipped products that are confirmed in the hands of end users, making them a safer bet than most. Again, safer. Not irrefutable proof they wont screw you. This is opposed to some random Easybake website registered by random people with no proof at all what they claim is true or ever will be. BFL has some issues with their new line, but they have shipped in the past, have a real office people on these forums have been to, etc. As noted this page is informational only, if you choose to use it to influence your buying decisions I am not liable for the end result. This is to gather up all speculation and fact in one spot, make your own judgement. This is largely opinion based by me, I agree. As noted any of these companies can contact me directly to clear themselves. It isnt perfect but better than letting speculation run wild and be completely confusing to everyone, and mitigate "is it a scam?" posts. The WHOIS information on DragonASIC is domains by proxy... GoDaddys privacy service, a lot of companies use that for a variety of reasons including political websites. Because that whois information matches to other known scam sites, in reality, means very little. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domains_by_ProxyThey could equally be a legit company wanting to shield their business location or a scam company, the WHOIS information in this specific instance is basically worthless. In effect, you have labeled a company as a 'scam' because you personally feel their WHOIS info is unreputable, despite there being millions of websites with the exact same WHOIS information. It is not the registrar itself that raises plenty of suspicion, it is the real address it is attached to. A web search of it digs up a few examples of scam sites being generated by whatever it is, based on that I would not give them your money over BFL or Avalon at present. You missed my point totally. The 'real address' listed in the WHOIS database IS NOT that companies physical address, it belongs to GoDaddy, the company they registered their domain name with. If you search Google for that address you will find millions of listings using it, because it the address of the Domains By Proxy service. http://reversewhois.domaintools.com/domains-by-proxy,-llc/GoDaddy owns that company, they are allowing other people to use (for payment) their address for the WHOIS information. The fact the WHOIS information shows you the same address as millions of other sites, some scams and some legit, can not be used for you to say 'oh they are a scam' that just stinks to high heaven as a witch-hunt. If you are legitimately concerned about showing which companies are and which companies are not scams, then you need to come up with a solid way of determining the distinctions, because right now, companies listed in this thread are being told they are 'guilty' without any means of proving otherwise (have you contacted the companies listed directly to tell them about your accusations and given them the opportunity to respond in this thread? I am guessing you haven't, just as you didn't us, we were informed by another community member here). It would appear right now, you are proclaiming yourself to be judge, jury and executioner to the claims that some of the companies listed above may be scams, without any actual 'solid' evidence to either prove or, disprove your accusations (or accusations by others) you feel they are a scam and therefore, they are, period, end of story. As a member of the BitcoinTalk community, that only registered some 9 days prior to me, how do WE know that you are legitimately interested in actually proving the companies you have listed are scams, you could potentially be someone working for Avalon or BFL hired to make their competitors or any of the other companies listed look good/bad (as an example of why you need a defined course of proving if a company is legit or not & incidentally the only 2 companies in green, so that could be a possibility). Let the BitcoinTalk community decide if a company listed above are scammers or not, this is a community after-all and should operate as such without a single person (hiding behind a made-up name on a message board) throwing around baseless accusations besmirching some potentially legitimate companies reputations, ours included, that just leads to further speculation and false assumptions.
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GPU Rigs
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April 16, 2013, 06:15:49 PM |
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One other thing I should have added in my post above...
Rather than asking the companies listed in the first post of this thread to contact you personally, ask that they post openly inn this thread, not behind closed doors where there is the potential of *anything* happening that could tarnish you, or their reputation.
Open communication is key here, if you truly are interested in allowing the companies listed the opportunity to present their case as to why they are not scammers.
By doing so you are allowing them to not only refute allegations already made, but are giving them an opportunity to build a reputation in the largest bitcoin forum, which can only help with their business growth if they are legitimate companies.
As the old adage goes, silence is golden.
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jml
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April 16, 2013, 06:18:03 PM |
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Is cloudhashing.com added to the list? EDIT ==== Also add http://www.cedartec.net/ as under review. Enterpoint.co.uk and ztex.de should be marked as cleared. New entries added. ztex and enterpoint are both ASIC/FPGA design specialists, but not Bitcoin specific vendors, addition has been excluded BLUE status added for companies that show more signs than not they are legitimate, but still awaiting confirmation that someone has an actual product in their hands to verify their integrity. They still sell for the bitcoin market which is why I mentioned them to be included. BFL also are "ASIC/FPGA design specialists" for other markets so I think with this premise, the aforementioned companies should be added. On BFL website, it says - "Butterfly Labs manufactures a line of high speed encryption processors for use in bitcoin mining, research, telecommunication and security applications." Besides, it makes it easier for noobs to make an informed decision of "who" sells "what" and if they are reliable. I don't get your logic. ZTEX and Enterpoint are not Bitcoin ASIC specific vendors, just generic FPGA/ASIC producers. These are the companies that Bitcoin ASIC vendors would work with to produce their chips, they don't sell Bitcoin ASIC units directly. This is just focusing on Bitcoin ASIC hardware vendors for scam/legit viability as so many new ones are emerging. The logic used here are the terms "hardware miner" and "seller": What makes a bitcoin miner? A mining hardware that can execute SHA256 and RIPEMD. Therefore I can argue that anyone who wants to purchase other technologies that are not "ASIC only" exist and other technologies can be used for mining; as an example, the UK company in your list selling GPU miners for litecoins and bitcoins. A seller can be a manufacturer (like BFL) that follows the B2C and B2B approach. The aforementioned companies (Enterpoint and ZTEX being highly reputable) follow the same model as BFL; they can sell to businesses and individual customers. In terms of hardware miner: ASIC is-a miner (dedicated), FPGA is-a miner (has a wider set of applications), GPU is-a miner (gaming and mining), CPU is-a miner (though not very efficient). It is my understanding that Enterpoint are gathering market intelligence on what bitcoin miners want to produce future FPGA products; namely Cairnsmore2. When they stop selling for the bitcoin market, then you can take them off the list as time goes by. So my suggestion is that if you want a more complete list of reputable/scam vendors for "bitcoin miners" (note I am not using ASIC only), then these two should be in the list; it would also help noobs get a glimpse of who is what. Imo, for now, ASIC to me seems a vaporous technology (1 confirmed report from Avalon) and personally I would opt for FPGA as a sure bet. This can also mean that if people adopt FPGA instead of ASIC, then there is room for scamming bitcoin miners who invest in FPGA based miners.
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"Everything is a matter of degree"
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jml
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April 16, 2013, 06:23:03 PM |
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I don't get your logic. ZTEX and Enterpoint are not Bitcoin ASIC specific vendors, just generic FPGA/ASIC producers. Neither is gpurigs.com an ASIC specific vendor; it is a separate company from asicrigs.com
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"Everything is a matter of degree"
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GPU Rigs
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April 16, 2013, 06:26:55 PM |
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This can also mean that if people adopt FPGA instead of ASIC, then there is room for scamming bitcoin miners who invest in FPGA based miners.
You bring up a good point, whilst BitcoinTalk is primarily focused on BTC, what is to say that a company selling GPU Rigs (such as ours) or FPGA systems would ship products specifically to clients on this forum, but then if someone ordering a GPU Rig for mining of Litecoins, they get ripped off if they are from another forum, or not members of this or any community? A full list of companies providing FPGA, ASIC and GPU systems is what is needed and community members here need to be able to add their feedback to the list as do the companies listed in a public forum, not behind closed doors (PMs) where literally *anything* could happen.
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GPU Rigs
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April 16, 2013, 06:40:20 PM |
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If you are a hardware seller in anything other than Green (confirmed shipping to end users) status, the fastest way to be greenlit is to send me a product or prototype to review to show the community it is real as a neutral third party. PM me to arrange this if you desire.
It would seem all you are saying any company on your list has to do is send you one of their devices gratis and you will remove them from your list. Just seems a little fishy to someone from the outside reading this thread anew and does not really lay claim to there being independent tribunal decisions if all I have to do is have our owner send you a free GPU Rig for you to say we are a legit company, then we can build one specifically for you, send it out, then the next 100 or so orders we get (as soon as you post we're a legit company), we will just run off with the money, never to be seen again... It would seem any scammer can see the benefits of spending maybe $1000 to send you a basic free unit (in the instance of GPU devices) in order to get 100x that in 'fresh' orders and do a runner. Anyway, its getting late, have to call it a night, hopefully we can determine a foolproof way of deciding how to discover legit companies from scam ones as this thread progresses.
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creativex
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April 16, 2013, 06:47:09 PM |
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While I can appreciate what you're trying to do, failing to make a distinction between a hardware vendor and a vaporware vendor is dangerous. By listing both BFL and Avalon as green you're steering those reading this thread to BFL as Avalon does batch shipping and is unavailable. The bottomless pit of orders BFL takes in makes it unclear how long one could potentially wait to receive a product ordered today. Avalon and BFL have both shipped products that are confirmed in the hands of end users, making them a safer bet than most. Again, safer. Not irrefutable proof they wont screw you. This is opposed to some random Easybake website registered by random people with no proof at all what they claim is true or ever will be. BFL has some issues with their new line, but they have shipped in the past, have a real office people on these forums have been to, etc. As noted this page is informational only, if you choose to use it to influence your buying decisions I am not liable for the end result. This is to gather up all speculation and fact in one spot, make your own judgement. This is largely opinion based by me, I agree. As noted any of these companies can contact me directly to clear themselves. It isnt perfect but better than letting speculation run wild and be completely confusing to everyone, and mitigate "is it a scam?" posts. BTCFPGA also shipped FPGA products, but failed miserably at transitioning to ASIC mining products, costing their investors plenty. Again, while I appreciate what you're doing, failing to differentiate between a company with actual ASIC mining hardware confirmed to be in the wild(Avalon) vs a company that's been selling pre-order vaporware endlessly for nearly a year without shipping a single chip is misleading. BFL should be blue. While they have shipped FPGAs in the past, they're not selling them now and they've shipped zero ASIC mining units.
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jml
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April 16, 2013, 06:48:40 PM Last edit: April 16, 2013, 07:13:58 PM by jml |
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If you are a hardware seller in anything other than Green (confirmed shipping to end users) status, the fastest way to be greenlit is to send me a product or prototype to review to show the community it is real as a neutral third party. PM me to arrange this if you desire.
It would seem all you are saying any company on your list has to do is send you one of their devices gratis and you will remove them from your list. Just seems a little fishy to someone from the outside reading this thread anew and does not really lay claim to there being independent tribunal decisions if all I have to do is have our owner send you a free GPU Rig for you to say we are a legit company, then we can build one specifically for you, send it out, then the next 100 or so orders we get (as soon as you post we're a legit company), we will just run off with the money, never to be seen again... It would seem any scammer can see the benefits of spending maybe $1000 to send you a basic free unit (in the instance of GPU devices) in order to get 100x that in 'fresh' orders and do a runner. Anyway, its getting late, have to call it a night, hopefully we can determine a foolproof way of deciding how to discover legit companies from scam ones as this thread progresses. Lol, no way I'd agree on that policy operatr, you might too many freebies! On a serious note, many things can go wrong going solo (such as being a despot and you decide who goes on the list and not forgetting the risk of corruption), and I think you are trying to take this as a one man band like gpu-rigs is trying to say. I would suggest a democratic way of looking at things and I would vouch for user Micon to be part of maintaining this list as he is so far doing a good job in investigating BFL. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=136392.0When technologies are being developed, you don't normally have one company or one individual dictating terms. Groups of companies called consortiums or expert people join to write up recommendations of how standards should be adhered. The same should be applied here; a group of reputable bitcoin members (with no affiliations to any company to remove bias) to investigate and decid if a company is a scam or not. For some banter this could happen to a one man band: Before: After:
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"Everything is a matter of degree"
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jml
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April 16, 2013, 06:50:01 PM Last edit: April 16, 2013, 07:24:09 PM by jml |
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While I can appreciate what you're trying to do, failing to make a distinction between a hardware vendor and a vaporware vendor is dangerous. By listing both BFL and Avalon as green you're steering those reading this thread to BFL as Avalon does batch shipping and is unavailable. The bottomless pit of orders BFL takes in makes it unclear how long one could potentially wait to receive a product ordered today. Avalon and BFL have both shipped products that are confirmed in the hands of end users, making them a safer bet than most. Again, safer. Not irrefutable proof they wont screw you. This is opposed to some random Easybake website registered by random people with no proof at all what they claim is true or ever will be. BFL has some issues with their new line, but they have shipped in the past, have a real office people on these forums have been to, etc. As noted this page is informational only, if you choose to use it to influence your buying decisions I am not liable for the end result. This is to gather up all speculation and fact in one spot, make your own judgement. This is largely opinion based by me, I agree. As noted any of these companies can contact me directly to clear themselves. It isnt perfect but better than letting speculation run wild and be completely confusing to everyone, and mitigate "is it a scam?" posts. BTCFPGA also shipped FPGA products, but failed miserably at transitioning to ASIC mining products, costing their investors plenty. Again, while I appreciate what you're doing, failing to differentiate between a company with actual ASIC mining hardware confirmed to be in the wild(Avalon) vs a company that's been selling pre-order vaporware endlessly for nearly a year without shipping a single chip is misleading. BFL should be blue. While they have shipped FPGAs in the past, they're not selling them now and they've shipped zero ASIC mining units. I agree with creativex, BFL should be blue until ASICs are shipped and confirmed by users. Also, cloudhashing should be blue because although you say they are a legitimate business, they are nonetheless dependent on a supplier who has not shipped.
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"Everything is a matter of degree"
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Operatr (OP)
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April 16, 2013, 07:35:56 PM Last edit: April 16, 2013, 08:57:47 PM by Operatr |
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I don't have enough time right now to reply to your responses entirely, however you have all made very valid points.
Namely: what qualifies me to be the one organizing this at all, and on what basis is trust established that I am not hashing out backroom deals with the scammers myself for a cut, etc.
And am I a scam myself in requesting hardware for review.
The goal here is:
A fair review process to determine the nature and legitimacy of a hardware producer.
Full transparency in conducting this review with respect to the privacy of that business. (In Cloudhashing's case, I was presented with transaction logs and the like, I cannot reveal it without their direct authority, but that presents a problem in sharing it with all of you, I know, something to think about)
Establishing some level of trust that I am only a third-party individual only serving a role as a whistleblower on obvious scams, the end goal being protecting people against being defrauded in a highly lucrative and explosive new industry full of parasites who want to take advantage of it at our collective expense.
Yes, there is more work to be done here and I can see that, and I will respond in detail to your replys later today somewhere. This is a work in progress and I welcome your ideas and input to make it better and more transparent in a way that we can all agree upon is fair, and these ideas will be implemented. I would absolutely like to include others to help review officially as to not be a solo act. But someone had to start the process somewhere and no one else had, so I elected myself to take it on for the betterment of the community.
Anything on here is not here because I think it is a scam, only as a database of up and coming vendors and some kind of verification they are not scammers that can generally be trusted. Though I have no influence or connection to these enterprises, and cannot be held accountable for their actions either.
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Operatr (OP)
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April 16, 2013, 11:46:02 PM Last edit: April 17, 2013, 12:01:06 AM by Operatr |
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The WHOIS information on DragonASIC is domains by proxy... GoDaddys privacy service, a lot of companies use that for a variety of reasons including political websites. Because that whois information matches to other known scam sites, in reality, means very little. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domains_by_ProxyThey could equally be a legit company wanting to shield their business location or a scam company, the WHOIS information in this specific instance is basically worthless. In effect, you have labeled a company as a 'scam' because you personally feel their WHOIS info is unreputable, despite there being millions of websites with the exact same WHOIS information. To note, admit to being totally wrong on that point, DragonASIC is moved to Under Review status. There are still a few fishy things about it to look into. I have just implemented several changes, including thread name change to avert any company included in the list feeling accused of being a scam.
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Operatr (OP)
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April 17, 2013, 03:06:06 PM Last edit: April 17, 2013, 03:16:33 PM by Operatr |
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It seems what we need here is to voice the overall feeling of the community when it comes to whether a business is a scam or not, so I will begin generating community polls to reflect this over the color coded method.
I will simply otherwise only add relevant facts to the database as we come across them supporting both sides of scam or legitimate.
This should do away possible bias from me personally in deciding what status is declared.
Does this sound like the direction we should go?
EDIT the forum poll won't work for this, Im looking at another option
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meowmeowbrowncow
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April 18, 2013, 11:37:26 AM |
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Re: BFL
Remember a common phrase: Past performance does not guarantee future returns.
So, even with a prior product it doesn't rule out BFL as being sketchy with the sheer amount of BS they spread from July '12 until now.
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"Bitcoin has been an amazing ride, but the most fascinating part to me is the seemingly universal tendency of libertarians to immediately become authoritarians the very moment they are given any measure of power to silence the dissent of others." - The Bible
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Lauda
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Terminated.
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April 19, 2013, 11:01:46 AM |
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So has anyone reviewed http://www.cedartec.net/index.php yet? If it's legit 999$ for 100GH/s is a good deal.
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"The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks" 😼 Bitcoin Core ( onion)
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Luckybit
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April 19, 2013, 11:58:21 AM |
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Seems like an impossible deal. They mean $99,000 not $999.
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Lauda
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Terminated.
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April 19, 2013, 12:14:58 PM |
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Seems like an impossible deal. They mean $99,000 not $999. 1500 GH/s around 30k $ butterflylabs.. I'm pretty sure the costs of assembling a 100 GH/s ASIC miner are nowhere near 1000$.
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"The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks" 😼 Bitcoin Core ( onion)
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rammy2k2
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April 19, 2013, 01:03:36 PM |
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Seems like an impossible deal. They mean $99,000 not $999. or its a scam like many others
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BTC-Joe
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April 20, 2013, 04:08:58 AM |
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It seems what we need here is to voice the overall feeling of the community when it comes to whether a business is a scam or not, so I will begin generating community polls to reflect this over the color coded method. No, what we need is a ban on members who make threads like this, believing they are the "authority" on what is a "scam" and what is not. You are also assuming that the vast majority of people here are incapable of discerning whether or not they can trust a company - in other words you think they're all stupid. The people who do get roped into a scam are usually victims of their own greed. Unless you have any FACTUAL EVIDENCE that support your allegation that a specific company is engaging in fraudulent activities, you should keep your mouth and your speculations to yourself. I will simply otherwise only add relevant facts to the database as we come across them supporting both sides of scam or legitimate. How about you start by giving us a full disclosure on yourself. Your real name? Your address? Your phone number where we can call if we have to check up on any of your "relevant facts". This should do away possible bias from me personally in deciding what status is declared.
Does this sound like the direction we should go? The direction you should go is away! The folks reading this thread should recall that the whole idea behind bitcoins "anonymity and freedom from centralized control". This fool wants to appoint himself as a federal regulator.
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