brg444
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April 21, 2016, 06:20:05 PM |
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$GBTC trading at nearly $700/BTC
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DaRude
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2903
Merit: 1919
In order to dump coins one must have coins
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April 21, 2016, 06:28:21 PM |
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Damn it was off on the poll by one day! Can we get a new poll now? We need a new target
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Tzupy
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2170
Merit: 1094
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April 21, 2016, 06:39:33 PM |
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Damn it was off on the poll by one day! Can we get a new poll now? We need a new target I realized now that I also voted >450, I must have been drunk, like in Trading Under Influence...
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Fakhoury
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1386
Merit: 1027
Permabull Bitcoin Investor
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April 21, 2016, 06:46:08 PM |
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JayJuanGee
Legendary
Online
Activity: 3892
Merit: 11151
Self-Custody is a right. Say no to"Non-custodial"
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April 21, 2016, 06:54:46 PM |
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... 2 days later my bank calls me and says the person's account that sent me the money was hacked and that they needed to refund the 180 euro. Nothing I could do at that point.
I had the same thing happen on Venmo... those fuckers. Â It's not about the money, it's about sending a message I don't know whether I should feed any trolls, yet if you could explain your amorphous response causing it to become less amorphous, that would be great.
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Andre#
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April 21, 2016, 07:19:56 PM |
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... You can use SEPA, OKpay, etc. The exchange is just starting, but it has lots of potential. At least, it is impossible to take down.
ELI5 who I wire actual irl money to, and why it won't get stolen immediately. 1) The bitcoins are programmed to be released only when two of three people agree that the money has been received. 2) When the money gets to your bank account you and the buyer release your coins. 3) If you lie about it, the buyer and a random aribitrator release your coins. Not sure that I would trust it... but seems legit. Did this with a SEPA transfer on bitquick once. The guy sent me 180 euro. I saw the transfer go through to my account. I released the bitcoins. 2 days later my bank calls me and says the person's account that sent me the money was hacked and that they needed to refund the 180 euro. Nothing I could do at that point. Sounds like: I sold a table once. The guy paid me 180 euro. I saw the bank notes fall in the palm of my hand. I gave him the table. 2 days later my central bank calls me and says someone's house had been burgled and the bank notes were stolen (they presented to me the list of serial numbers of the stolen bank notes) and that I had to give those bank notes back to them. Nothing I could do at that point. Hence, it doesn't happen like that. If you can show you sold or exchanged something for that money, it's yours. No shopkeeper ever had to give money back because he accepted what turned out to be stolen money. Only if you knew the money was stolen, then you're in trouble. (e.g. asking and receiving a ridiculous commission for swapping BTC to cash raises the suspicion that you may have known it was fishy.) It has happened a few times that scammers bought BTC from me while not paying for it themselves, but manipulating others into sending money to my bank account. I've never had to pay anything back, since I could always prove I was acting in good faith. However, such scams are a possible threat to Bitsquare, because buyers and sellers are insulated from each other, which makes it difficult (if not impossible) for the receiver of fiat to assess the sender of fiat actually knows he is buying BTC. On the other hand, it also offers perfect deniability.
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whored
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
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April 21, 2016, 07:21:20 PM |
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... 2 days later my bank calls me and says the person's account that sent me the money was hacked and that they needed to refund the 180 euro. Nothing I could do at that point.
I had the same thing happen on Venmo... those fuckers.  It's not about the money, it's about sending a message I don't know whether I should feed any trolls, yet if you could explain your amorphous response causing it to become less amorphous, that would be great.  Sure. But first you gotta delineate the aspects of aforementioned amorphicity you feel are too nebulous, and thus may benefit from further, that is to say more rigorous, definition.
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Denker
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1442
Merit: 1016
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April 21, 2016, 07:29:06 PM |
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That looks nice if you ask me! 450 soon? What do you think?
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whored
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
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April 21, 2016, 07:33:34 PM |
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... You can use SEPA, OKpay, etc. The exchange is just starting, but it has lots of potential. At least, it is impossible to take down.
ELI5 who I wire actual irl money to, and why it won't get stolen immediately. 1) The bitcoins are programmed to be released only when two of three people agree that the money has been received. 2) When the money gets to your bank account you and the buyer release your coins. 3) If you lie about it, the buyer and a random aribitrator release your coins. Not sure that I would trust it... but seems legit. Did this with a SEPA transfer on bitquick once. The guy sent me 180 euro. I saw the transfer go through to my account. I released the bitcoins. 2 days later my bank calls me and says the person's account that sent me the money was hacked and that they needed to refund the 180 euro. Nothing I could do at that point. Sounds like: I sold a table once. The guy paid me 180 euro. I saw the bank notes fall in the palm of my hand. I gave him the table. 2 days later my central bank calls me and says someone's house had been burgled and the bank notes were stolen (they presented to me the list of serial numbers of the stolen bank notes) and that I had to give those bank notes back to them. Nothing I could do at that point. Hence, it doesn't happen like that. If you can show you sold or exchanged something for that money, it's yours. No shopkeeper ever had to give money back because he accepted what turned out to be stolen money. Only if you knew the money was stolen, then you're in trouble. (e.g. asking and receiving a ridiculous commission for swapping BTC to cash raises the suspicion that you may have known it was fishy.) It has happened a few times that scammers bought BTC from me while not paying for it themselves, but manipulating others into sending money to my bank account. I've never had to pay anything back, since I could always prove I was acting in good faith. However, such scams are a possible threat to Bitsquare, because buyers and sellers are insulated from each other, which makes it difficult (if not impossible) for the receiver of fiat to assess the sender of fiat actually knows he is buying BTC. On the other hand, it also offers perfect deniability. I can see how JJG could have gotten chumped, but Elwar does that shit all the time, he's the proverbial money changer. If Elwar could get pwnt like that, what of us mere mortals? Seriously tho, check the context before replying. We're talking about the fail that is decentralized exchange.
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ImI
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1946
Merit: 1019
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April 21, 2016, 07:36:32 PM |
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JayJuanGee
Legendary
Online
Activity: 3892
Merit: 11151
Self-Custody is a right. Say no to"Non-custodial"
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April 21, 2016, 07:45:42 PM |
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... 2 days later my bank calls me and says the person's account that sent me the money was hacked and that they needed to refund the 180 euro. Nothing I could do at that point.
I had the same thing happen on Venmo... those fuckers.  It's not about the money, it's about sending a message I don't know whether I should feed any trolls, yet if you could explain your amorphous response causing it to become less amorphous, that would be great.  Sure. But first you gotta delineate the aspects of aforementioned amorphicity you feel are too nebulous, and thus may benefit from further, that is to say more rigorous, definition. Naw... I'm not going to play this stupid-ass game, in which you continue to fail/refuse to clarify the meaning of your simple sentence, i.e.: "It's not about the money, it's about sending a message "
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whored
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
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April 21, 2016, 07:51:19 PM |
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... 2 days later my bank calls me and says the person's account that sent me the money was hacked and that they needed to refund the 180 euro. Nothing I could do at that point.
I had the same thing happen on Venmo... those fuckers.  It's not about the money, it's about sending a message I don't know whether I should feed any trolls, yet if you could explain your amorphous response causing it to become less amorphous, that would be great.  ÃƒÂ‚ Sure. But first you gotta delineate the aspects of aforementioned amorphicity you feel are too nebulous, and thus may benefit from further, that is to say more rigorous, definition. Naw... I'm not going to play this stupid-ass game, in which you continue to fail/refuse to clarify the meaning of your simple sentence, i.e.:  "It's not about the money, it's about sending a message " I just thought it was some cold-blooded shit to say to a motherfucker before I popped a cap in his ass
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Fatman3001
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1013
Make Bitcoin glow with ENIAC
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April 21, 2016, 07:57:14 PM |
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FINALLY!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!!! !!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !
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criptix
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2464
Merit: 1145
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April 21, 2016, 07:58:21 PM |
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Good stuff took them long enough. Now we just need a way how kids can easily change their billions of fiat money in bitcoin without problems
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Wexlike
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1473
Merit: 1086
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April 21, 2016, 08:03:34 PM |
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This is not Valve!
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Andre#
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April 21, 2016, 08:23:25 PM |
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... You can use SEPA, OKpay, etc. The exchange is just starting, but it has lots of potential. At least, it is impossible to take down.
ELI5 who I wire actual irl money to, and why it won't get stolen immediately. 1) The bitcoins are programmed to be released only when two of three people agree that the money has been received. 2) When the money gets to your bank account you and the buyer release your coins. 3) If you lie about it, the buyer and a random aribitrator release your coins. Not sure that I would trust it... but seems legit. Did this with a SEPA transfer on bitquick once. The guy sent me 180 euro. I saw the transfer go through to my account. I released the bitcoins. 2 days later my bank calls me and says the person's account that sent me the money was hacked and that they needed to refund the 180 euro. Nothing I could do at that point. Sounds like: I sold a table once. The guy paid me 180 euro. I saw the bank notes fall in the palm of my hand. I gave him the table. 2 days later my central bank calls me and says someone's house had been burgled and the bank notes were stolen (they presented to me the list of serial numbers of the stolen bank notes) and that I had to give those bank notes back to them. Nothing I could do at that point. Hence, it doesn't happen like that. If you can show you sold or exchanged something for that money, it's yours. No shopkeeper ever had to give money back because he accepted what turned out to be stolen money. Only if you knew the money was stolen, then you're in trouble. (e.g. asking and receiving a ridiculous commission for swapping BTC to cash raises the suspicion that you may have known it was fishy.) It has happened a few times that scammers bought BTC from me while not paying for it themselves, but manipulating others into sending money to my bank account. I've never had to pay anything back, since I could always prove I was acting in good faith. However, such scams are a possible threat to Bitsquare, because buyers and sellers are insulated from each other, which makes it difficult (if not impossible) for the receiver of fiat to assess the sender of fiat actually knows he is buying BTC. On the other hand, it also offers perfect deniability. I can see how JJG could have gotten chumped, but Elwar does that shit all the time, he's the proverbial money changer. If Elwar could get pwnt like that, what of us mere mortals? Seriously tho, check the context before replying. We're talking about the fail that is decentralized exchange. I not only checked the context, I'm trading on Bitsquare now (two bids, two asks, one trade ongoing). It works like a charm, I'm impressed how mature the software is. No failing in sight, yet.
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whored
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
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April 21, 2016, 08:24:09 PM |
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BFX leading this? On no volume? I'm confuse... I not only checked the context, I'm trading on Bitsquare now (two bids, two asks, one trade ongoing). It works like a charm, I'm impressed how mature the software is. No failing in sight, yet.
Yeah, me too. Made me three million dollars already. No way for you to verify it, could be lying through my teeth, but hey, that's the beauty of it, amirite?
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hd060053
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April 21, 2016, 08:27:48 PM |
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nice, steam will accept BTC
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kehtolo
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April 21, 2016, 08:28:23 PM |
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Chart porn.. Even though i just drew some lines on a chart
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