fuzion2
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June 18, 2011, 06:11:29 PM |
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Wow, this is surprising.
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iamzill
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June 18, 2011, 06:21:27 PM |
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It is a good news indeed. Now decentralized blackmarket exchanges will emerge, protected by TOR and other anonymous networks. And having legal exchanges like Mt Gox and Britcoin is also very important. I expect it to work like this:
Blackmarket goods <-> Blackmarket exchanges <-> Cash <-> Legal exchanges <-> Legal goods
Well said, sir. I've converted foreign currencies in cash in small local shops and it's quick and easy. It's only a matter of time before they start accepting bitcoin, provided that: 1. the price stabilize 2. there are large and legal major exchanges in every country 3. they're tech savvy
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Stramash
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June 18, 2011, 06:58:04 PM |
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I have used Britcoin and it is an excellent service, fair play to the guy for doing it. To charge fees it has to be legal, which is fair enough I think. It would also give traders a bit of protection.
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goodlord666
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100%
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June 18, 2011, 07:29:23 PM |
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There's no need for MtGox, etc. to challenge authorities as they help establish bitcoins as a widely accepted commodity.
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crawdaddy
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November 07, 2011, 01:35:25 PM |
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Mt Gox & Britcoin have sold out to The Big Brother
You should change the topic to "Mt Gox & Britcoin make themself ready for serious-businesses to adapt bitcoin" That article is excellent news for bitcoin. qft You really think a bank like mtgox's doing $1mil a month in book, at least, is going to be able to NOT cooperate with govt. authorities like some kind of sit-in protester? No, they have to pay taxes and comply with subpoenas, court orders, and regulations just like every other business. That’s just because they think inside the box and not outside it. The answers to fix the problems you have highlight exist. You just have to have an imagination. I know that can be hard at times because most of us went to government school and imagination is outlawed there, but imagination can set us free.
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"The only security men can have for their political liberty, consists in keeping their money in their own pockets". Lysander Spooner
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TheFoxyShortBus
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November 07, 2011, 10:44:31 PM |
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While I personally feel that "bending over" to a governmental authority is a terrible idea, as it corrupts all great ideas, in reality, there is almost nothing that any government can do to stop the use of bitcoins for illegal or legal activity except to outlaw exchanges in their own country. An example would be the US making it illegal for a bitcoin, USD exchange to be legal in the US, but one can just circumvent this by using an exchange in another county wired to a foreign bank account then sent to the US. No government can stop that essentially.
Also, tracing bitcoins is damn near impossible, yeah, you can find the trade in account on Mt Gox, but once it goes through a wallet or two, unless you keep a real close eye on it, its impossible to trace, hence why silkroad uses bit coins, almost impossible to trace. Essentially, bitcoins are like a swiss bank account, unless you want somebody to know what you have, they aren't going to know.
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kdomanski
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November 07, 2011, 11:03:15 PM |
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/.../ Essentially, bitcoins are like a swiss bank account, unless you want somebody to know what you have, they aren't going to know.
Except the Swiss Frank doesn't loose 90% of it's value over 5 months. ;] We still need that BTC economy to increase stability and we need miners to be marginalized in that economy.
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Flyers66
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November 08, 2011, 01:15:23 AM |
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I wonder sometimes, can bitcoins really be traced? Don't people who are using them for illegal purposes know all of the ways to avoid being traced on cashout?
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TheFoxyShortBus
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November 08, 2011, 08:34:31 AM |
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/.../ Essentially, bitcoins are like a swiss bank account, unless you want somebody to know what you have, they aren't going to know.
Except the Swiss Frank doesn't loose 90% of it's value over 5 months. ;] We still need that BTC economy to increase stability and we need miners to be marginalized in that economy. This is true, but I never talked about value, merely how the cryptography works making it almost un-traceable, its been compared to AES, which as to my knowledge even the government is unable to crack in any given time unless they luck out. But, I can't lose money in bitcoin as I don't pay for power (thank you "free" electricity) and I bought my graphics cards for gaming, they just mine in my free time, but I assume the price will go back up, as things level off and bitcoins begin being used in other places as well.
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Ferroh
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November 08, 2011, 12:15:50 PM |
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If you want Bitcoin to be widely accepted, then the big exchanges need to cooperate with the government.
Bitcoin is not about facilitating some sort of underground shady movement of criminals. It is about reforming our monetary system legitimately.
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EhVedadoOAnonimato
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November 08, 2011, 01:02:56 PM |
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There's no need for MtGox, etc. to challenge authorities as they help establish bitcoins as a widely accepted commodity.
True, but there's no need to willingly and gladly cooperate with criminals either. You may behave neutrally and if they ever point a gun at you, then you obey. Particularly with states, which have to be somehow predictable. The way I see it, it seems Amir for example has been begging for his majesty's blessing since the very beginning. And MtGox is now tracing all their users, holding ransom the money of those who do not agree until they submit their IDs. And I'm not aware of any actual threat MtGox has suffered that could justify such behavior. Meanwhile, even UBS, a big bank, resisted while it could against the US government, only surrendering its customers' data when the threat became really strong (suspension of their banking license in US). I'm very suspicious about these exchanges, to say the least. Let's hope MoonShadow is right and my suspiciousness has no reason of being.
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crawdaddy
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November 08, 2011, 08:09:10 PM |
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If you want Bitcoin to be widely accepted, then the big exchanges need to cooperate with the government.
Bitcoin is not about facilitating some sort of underground shady movement of criminals. It is about reforming our monetary system legitimately.
Why cooperate with a den of wolves and thieves?
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"The only security men can have for their political liberty, consists in keeping their money in their own pockets". Lysander Spooner
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bittersweet
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November 14, 2011, 04:41:02 AM |
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big exchanges need to cooperate with the government (...) Bitcoin is not about facilitating some sort of underground shady movement of criminals You are contradicting yourself, sir.
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My Bitcoin address: 1DjTsAYP3xR4ymcTUKNuFa5aHt42q2VgSg
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