sirazimuth
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born once atheist
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August 27, 2019, 11:19:57 PM |
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I didn't vote but if I was forced I would say BTC only because it is harder to come by than sex.
harder....come...sex there's a really clever double pun joke in there somewhere but alas...I couldn't find the damn thing...
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Hueristic
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Doomed to see the future and unable to prevent it
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August 27, 2019, 11:28:52 PM |
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I didn't vote but if I was forced I would say BTC only because it is harder to come by than sex.
harder....come...sex there's a really clever double pun joke in there somewhere but alas...I couldn't find the damn thing... Can't get anything past U! Let them do it in one swift market order so many can get dem cheap coinz....
Get them lowball offers ready boyz!
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gembitz
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August 28, 2019, 12:24:46 AM |
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mt gox coins offloaded yet? reeeee
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Biodom
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August 28, 2019, 02:00:07 AM |
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I posit that hodlers would probably do very well in a marshmallow test (when they were kids). I doubt that anyone here was tested, so....
The question is: who is the strongest btc hodler on WO? Possible qualifications: never sold any bitcoin (holdling at least since the peak in 2013 or earlier) for fiat and/or alts and forks. Direct purchasing of things is OK since without spending there would be no btc success story. Come forward, tell the story and let us admire your persistence against all odds.
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jojo69
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diamond-handed zealot
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August 28, 2019, 02:32:01 AM Last edit: August 28, 2019, 04:54:47 AM by jojo69 |
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HairyMaclairy
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Degenerate bull hatter & Bitcoin monotheist
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August 28, 2019, 02:51:03 AM Last edit: August 28, 2019, 03:12:06 AM by HairyMaclairy |
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Interim ruling by the judge in Kleinbold v Craig Wright TLDR: Judge rules that CSW is a lying shithead. Dr. Wright’s story not only was not supported by other evidence in the record, it defies common sense and real-life experience. Consider his claims. He designed Bitcoin to be an anonymous digital cash system with an evidentiary trail. DE 236 at 15. He mined approximately 1,000,000 bitcoin, but there is no accessible evidentiary trail for the vast majority of them. He is a latter-day Dr. Frankenstein whose creation turned to evil when hijacked by drug dealers, human traffickers, and other criminals. Id. at 16-17. To save himself, he engaged David Kleiman to remove all traces of his involvement with Bitcoin from the public record. Id. at 16. As part of his efforts to disassociate from Bitcoin and “so that I wouldn’t be in trouble,” he put all his bitcoin (and/or the keys to it – his story changed) into a computer file that is encrypted with a hierarchical Shamir encryption protocol. See Id. at 23. He then put the encrypted file into a “blind” trust (of which he is one of the trustees), gave away a controlling number of the key slices to now-deceased David Kleiman, and therefore cannot now decrypt the file that controls access to the bitcoin. His only hope is that a bonded courier arrives on an unknown dated in January 2020 with the decryption keys. If the courier does not appear, Dr. Wright has lost his ability to access billions of dollars worth of bitcoin, and he does not care. Id. at 21-22. Inconceivable. During his testimony, Dr. Wright’s demeanor did not impress me as someone who was telling the truth. When it was favorable to him, Dr. Wright appeared to have an excellent memory and a scrupulous attention to detail. Otherwise, Dr. Wright was belligerent and evasive.
He did not directly and clearly respond to questions. He quibbled about irrelevant technicalities. When confronted with evidence indicating that certain documents had been fabricated or altered, he became extremely defensive, tried to sidestep questioning, and ultimately made vague comments about his systems being hacked and others having access to his computers. None of these excuses were corroborated by other evidence. Sadly, Dr. Wright does not write on a clean slate. As Judge Bloom recently noted in denying Dr. Wright’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings, Dr. Wright has taken directly conflicting factual positions at different times during this litigation. DE 265 at 10 (“[T]he record is replete with instances in which the Defendant has proffered conflicting sworn testimony before this Court.). As discussed below, that behavior continued before me. Dr. Wright has a substantial stake in the outcome of the case. If Plaintiffs succeed on their claims, Dr. Wright stands to lose billions of dollars. That gives him a powerful motive not to identify his bitcoin. As long as the relevant addresses remain secret, he can transfer the bitcoin without the Plaintiffs being able to find them. After all, Bitcoin is an anonymous cybercurrency. Similarly, Dr. Wright had many reasons not to tell the truth. Most notably, Dr. Wright might want to prevent the Plaintiffs (or others) from finding his Bitcoin trove. Alternatively, there was evidence indicating that relevant documents were altered in or about 2014, when the Australian Tax Office was investigating one of Dr. Wright’s companies. Perhaps Dr. Wright’s testimony here is motivated by certain legal and factual positions he took in the Australian Tax Office investigation and from which he cannot now recede. There was substantial credible evidence that documents produced by Dr. Wright to support his position in this litigation are fraudulent. There was credible and compelling evidence that documents had been altered. Other documents are contradicted by Dr. Wright’s testimony or declaration.
While it is true that there was no direct evidence that Dr. Wright was responsible for alterations or falsification of documents, there is no evidence before the Court that anyone else had a motive to falsify them. As such, there is a strong, and unrebutted, circumstantial inference that Dr. Wright willfully created the fraudulent documents. One example is the Deed of Trust document for the Tulip Trust. Among the trust assets identified in the purported Deed of Trust creating the Tulip Trust on October 23, 2012, are “All Bitcoin and associated ledger assets transferred into Tulip Trading Ltd by Mr David Kleiman on Friday, 10th June 2011 following transfer to Mr Kleiman by Dr Wright on the 09th June 2011 . . .This incles [sic] the 1,200,111 Bitcoin held under the former arrangement and the attached conditions.” P. Ex. 9 at 2.
Notably absent from the list of trust assets is any encrypted file, software, public or private keys. The Deed of Trust states that the parties forming the Tulip Trust are Wright International Investments Ltd and Tulip Trading Ltd. Id. at 1. There was credible and conclusive evidence at the hearing that Dr. Wright did not control Tulip Trading Ltd. until 2014. P. Exs. 11-14; DE 236 at 88-96. Moreover, computer forensic analysis indicated that the Deed of Trust presented to the Court was backdated. The totality of the evidence in the record does not substantiate that the Tulip Trust exists. Combining these facts with my observations of Dr. Wright’s demeanor during his testimony, I find that Dr. Wright’s testimony that this Trust exists was intentionally false.11
Dr. Wright’s false testimony about the Tulip Trust was part of a sustained and concerted effort to impede discovery into his bitcoin holdings. Start with Dr. Wright’s deceptive and incomplete discovery pleadings. He testified at the evidentiary hearing that at least as early as December 2018 he knew that he could not provide a listing of his bitcoin holdings. Yet, the Court was not told this “fact” until April 18, 2019. I give Dr. Wright the benefit of the doubt that prior to May 14 the Plaintiffs were seeking information that went beyond a list of his bitcoin holdings on December 31, 2013.
After the May 14 discovery hearing, however, Dr. Wright was aware that the Court expected him to provide Plaintiffs with sufficient information so those bitcoin holdings could be traced. Nevertheless, having failed to hold off discovery on legal grounds, after March 14, Dr. Wright changed course and started making affirmative misleading factual statements to the Court. His April 18 Motion argued for the first time, “In 2011, Dr. Wright transferred ownership of all his Bitcoin into a blind trust. Dr. Wright is not a trustee or beneficiary of the blind trust. Nor does Dr. Wright know any of the public addresses which hold any of the bitcoin in the blind trust. Thus, Dr. Wright, does not know and cannot provide any other public addresses.” This pleading was intended to communicate the impression that Dr. Wright had no remaining connection to the bitcoin. It was also intended to create the impression that the bitcoin themselves had been transferred to the trust. 12 Dr. Wright almost immediately made irreconcilable statements about the Tulip Trust. The April 18 Motion stated it was a blind trust and he was not a trustee. His sworn declaration three weeks later stated that he is one of the trustees of the Tulip Trust.
The trust can hardly be considered “blind” (as represented in the April 18 Motion) if Dr. Wright is one of the trustees. At least one set of these representations about the trust and Dr. Wright’s status as a trustee necessarily is intentionally misleading.
Dr. Wright also changed his story about what is in the alleged trust. The April 18 Motion states that Dr. Wright’s bitcoin had been transferred to a blind trust, and therefore are owned by the trusts, not by Dr. Wright. The Court gave Dr. Wright an extension of time so he could meet with his counsel to draft and file a declaration about the trust. In the May 8 declaration, he swore that he met with counsel and that he provided counsel “with additional details and clarity regarding trusts that I settled that hold or held Bitcoin that I mined or acquired on or before December 31, 2013.” DE 222 at ¶ 3 (emphasis added). He further swore, “In June 2011, I took steps to consolidate the Bitcoin I mined with Bitcoin that I acquired and other assets. In October 2012, a formal trust document was executed, creating a trust whose corpus included the Bitcoin that I mined, acquired and would acquire in the future. The name of that trust is Tulip Trust. It was formed in the Seycelles [sic].” Id. at ¶ 5 (emphasis added).
His declaration was unequivocal that the trust held bitcoin. Nevertheless, at his deposition on June 26 (and at the evidentiary hearing), he changed his story to say that the trust contained an encrypted file with the keys to the bitcoin, not the bitcoin itself. The hearing testimony that the trust holds only keys, not bitcoin, cannot be reconciled with the statements in the April 18 Motion and the May 8 declaration that it contains bitcoin. At least one of these representations is intentionally false. During his testimony at the evidentiary hearing, Dr. Wright made a point of being precise in his use of terms, including contesting whether a document was an email or a pdf of an email. It is not credible that, given his claim to have an unmatched understanding of Bitcoin, he would have mistaken the Bitcoin currency for the keys that control the ability to transfer the currency. I find instead that he belatedly realized that any transaction(s) transferring bitcoin into the alleged Tulip Trust would be reflected on the Bitcoin master blockchain, that he would then be required to identify those transaction(s), and that Plaintiffs could use that information to trace the bitcoin.
So, Dr. Wright changed his story to say that only the keys had been transferred. Ultimately, Dr. Wright’s claim of inability to comply with the Court’s Orders relies on the existence of an encrypted file in the Tulip Trust containing the information necessary to reconstruct Dr. Wright’s bitcoin holdings. I find that this file does not exist.
Dr. Wright testified this file is an encrypted compressed file containing multiple sub-files. He swore, “Each of those files has a differently calculated encryption key . . . It’s a hierarchical system, where, based on a combination of the file hash and the original encryption key – there are a variety of those – there are multiple Shamir schemes.” DE 236 at 107. The Shamir scheme divides a single encryption key into multiple key slices; some subset of the total key slices is needed to decrypt the file.13 Dr. Wright testified that 15 key slices existed for the outermost file, only eight key slices were needed to decrypt this file, but he only had access to seven key slices. DE 236 at 125-26; see also DE 236 at 114 (“The eight of 15 is the key that we’re talking about to regenerate all of the addresses”). After observing Dr. Wright’s demeanor and the lack of any other credible evidence in the record that this file exists, I find that a preponderance of the evidence establishes that no such file exists and that Dr. Wright’s testimony was intentionally false. https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536.277.0.pdf
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HairyMaclairy
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Degenerate bull hatter & Bitcoin monotheist
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August 28, 2019, 03:04:57 AM |
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More: Counsel for Dr. Wright argued that it would be fundamentally unfair to Dr. Wright, and contrary to concepts of justice to impose discovery sanctions that forfeited his right to fully litigate the merits of his case. I have found that Dr. Wright intentionally submitted fraudulent documents to the Court, obstructed a judicial proceeding, and gave perjurious testimony. No conduct is more antithetical to the administration of justice. The sanctions I am imposing are necessary to achieve the remedial and punitive purposes of Rule 37. No lesser sanction would suffice.
I think that’s lawyer talk for CSW is fucking REKT.
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Biodom
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August 28, 2019, 03:36:48 AM |
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Interim ruling by the judge in Kleinbold v Craig Wright TLDR: Judge rules that CSW is a lying shithead. The hearing testimony that the trust holds only keys, not bitcoin, cannot be reconciled with the statements in the April 18 Motion and the May 8 declaration that it contains bitcoin...It is not credible that, given his claim to have an unmatched understanding of Bitcoin, he would have mistaken the Bitcoin currency for the keys that control the ability to transfer the currency. https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536.277.0.pdfNot disagreeing with a gist of it, but honorable made a whoopsie there. Somehow most lawyers cannot understand that the ability to transfer bitcoin (having private keys) IS bitcoin.
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Searing
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Clueless!
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August 28, 2019, 03:52:06 AM |
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Interim ruling by the judge in Kleinbold v Craig Wright TLDR: Judge rules that CSW is a lying shithead. Dr. Wright’s story not only was not supported by other evidence in the record, it defies common sense and real-life experience. Consider his claims. He designed Bitcoin to be an anonymous digital cash system with an evidentiary trail. DE 236 at 15. He mined approximately 1,000,000 bitcoin, but there is no accessible evidentiary trail for the vast majority of them. He is a latter-day Dr. Frankenstein whose creation turned to evil when hijacked by drug dealers, human traffickers, and other criminals. Id. at 16-17. To save himself, he engaged David Kleiman to remove all traces of his involvement with Bitcoin from the public record. Id. at 16. As part of his efforts to disassociate from Bitcoin and “so that I wouldn’t be in trouble,” he put all his bitcoin (and/or the keys to it – his story changed) into a computer file that is encrypted with a hierarchical Shamir encryption protocol. See Id. at 23. He then put the encrypted file into a “blind” trust (of which he is one of the trustees), gave away a controlling number of the key slices to now-deceased David Kleiman, and therefore cannot now decrypt the file that controls access to the bitcoin. His only hope is that a bonded courier arrives on an unknown dated in January 2020 with the decryption keys. If the courier does not appear, Dr. Wright has lost his ability to access billions of dollars worth of bitcoin, and he does not care. Id. at 21-22. Inconceivable. During his testimony, Dr. Wright’s demeanor did not impress me as someone who was telling the truth. When it was favorable to him, Dr. Wright appeared to have an excellent memory and a scrupulous attention to detail. Otherwise, Dr. Wright was belligerent and evasive.
He did not directly and clearly respond to questions. He quibbled about irrelevant technicalities. When confronted with evidence indicating that certain documents had been fabricated or altered, he became extremely defensive, tried to sidestep questioning, and ultimately made vague comments about his systems being hacked and others having access to his computers. None of these excuses were corroborated by other evidence. Sadly, Dr. Wright does not write on a clean slate. As Judge Bloom recently noted in denying Dr. Wright’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings, Dr. Wright has taken directly conflicting factual positions at different times during this litigation. DE 265 at 10 (“[T]he record is replete with instances in which the Defendant has proffered conflicting sworn testimony before this Court.). As discussed below, that behavior continued before me. Dr. Wright has a substantial stake in the outcome of the case. If Plaintiffs succeed on their claims, Dr. Wright stands to lose billions of dollars. That gives him a powerful motive not to identify his bitcoin. As long as the relevant addresses remain secret, he can transfer the bitcoin without the Plaintiffs being able to find them. After all, Bitcoin is an anonymous cybercurrency. Similarly, Dr. Wright had many reasons not to tell the truth. Most notably, Dr. Wright might want to prevent the Plaintiffs (or others) from finding his Bitcoin trove. Alternatively, there was evidence indicating that relevant documents were altered in or about 2014, when the Australian Tax Office was investigating one of Dr. Wright’s companies. Perhaps Dr. Wright’s testimony here is motivated by certain legal and factual positions he took in the Australian Tax Office investigation and from which he cannot now recede. There was substantial credible evidence that documents produced by Dr. Wright to support his position in this litigation are fraudulent. There was credible and compelling evidence that documents had been altered. Other documents are contradicted by Dr. Wright’s testimony or declaration.
While it is true that there was no direct evidence that Dr. Wright was responsible for alterations or falsification of documents, there is no evidence before the Court that anyone else had a motive to falsify them. As such, there is a strong, and unrebutted, circumstantial inference that Dr. Wright willfully created the fraudulent documents. One example is the Deed of Trust document for the Tulip Trust. Among the trust assets identified in the purported Deed of Trust creating the Tulip Trust on October 23, 2012, are “All Bitcoin and associated ledger assets transferred into Tulip Trading Ltd by Mr David Kleiman on Friday, 10th June 2011 following transfer to Mr Kleiman by Dr Wright on the 09th June 2011 . . .This incles [sic] the 1,200,111 Bitcoin held under the former arrangement and the attached conditions.” P. Ex. 9 at 2.
Notably absent from the list of trust assets is any encrypted file, software, public or private keys. The Deed of Trust states that the parties forming the Tulip Trust are Wright International Investments Ltd and Tulip Trading Ltd. Id. at 1. There was credible and conclusive evidence at the hearing that Dr. Wright did not control Tulip Trading Ltd. until 2014. P. Exs. 11-14; DE 236 at 88-96. Moreover, computer forensic analysis indicated that the Deed of Trust presented to the Court was backdated. The totality of the evidence in the record does not substantiate that the Tulip Trust exists. Combining these facts with my observations of Dr. Wright’s demeanor during his testimony, I find that Dr. Wright’s testimony that this Trust exists was intentionally false.11
Dr. Wright’s false testimony about the Tulip Trust was part of a sustained and concerted effort to impede discovery into his bitcoin holdings. Start with Dr. Wright’s deceptive and incomplete discovery pleadings. He testified at the evidentiary hearing that at least as early as December 2018 he knew that he could not provide a listing of his bitcoin holdings. Yet, the Court was not told this “fact” until April 18, 2019. I give Dr. Wright the benefit of the doubt that prior to May 14 the Plaintiffs were seeking information that went beyond a list of his bitcoin holdings on December 31, 2013.
After the May 14 discovery hearing, however, Dr. Wright was aware that the Court expected him to provide Plaintiffs with sufficient information so those bitcoin holdings could be traced. Nevertheless, having failed to hold off discovery on legal grounds, after March 14, Dr. Wright changed course and started making affirmative misleading factual statements to the Court. His April 18 Motion argued for the first time, “In 2011, Dr. Wright transferred ownership of all his Bitcoin into a blind trust. Dr. Wright is not a trustee or beneficiary of the blind trust. Nor does Dr. Wright know any of the public addresses which hold any of the bitcoin in the blind trust. Thus, Dr. Wright, does not know and cannot provide any other public addresses.” This pleading was intended to communicate the impression that Dr. Wright had no remaining connection to the bitcoin. It was also intended to create the impression that the bitcoin themselves had been transferred to the trust. 12 Dr. Wright almost immediately made irreconcilable statements about the Tulip Trust. The April 18 Motion stated it was a blind trust and he was not a trustee. His sworn declaration three weeks later stated that he is one of the trustees of the Tulip Trust.
The trust can hardly be considered “blind” (as represented in the April 18 Motion) if Dr. Wright is one of the trustees. At least one set of these representations about the trust and Dr. Wright’s status as a trustee necessarily is intentionally misleading.
Dr. Wright also changed his story about what is in the alleged trust. The April 18 Motion states that Dr. Wright’s bitcoin had been transferred to a blind trust, and therefore are owned by the trusts, not by Dr. Wright. The Court gave Dr. Wright an extension of time so he could meet with his counsel to draft and file a declaration about the trust. In the May 8 declaration, he swore that he met with counsel and that he provided counsel “with additional details and clarity regarding trusts that I settled that hold or held Bitcoin that I mined or acquired on or before December 31, 2013.” DE 222 at ¶ 3 (emphasis added). He further swore, “In June 2011, I took steps to consolidate the Bitcoin I mined with Bitcoin that I acquired and other assets. In October 2012, a formal trust document was executed, creating a trust whose corpus included the Bitcoin that I mined, acquired and would acquire in the future. The name of that trust is Tulip Trust. It was formed in the Seycelles [sic].” Id. at ¶ 5 (emphasis added).
His declaration was unequivocal that the trust held bitcoin. Nevertheless, at his deposition on June 26 (and at the evidentiary hearing), he changed his story to say that the trust contained an encrypted file with the keys to the bitcoin, not the bitcoin itself. The hearing testimony that the trust holds only keys, not bitcoin, cannot be reconciled with the statements in the April 18 Motion and the May 8 declaration that it contains bitcoin. At least one of these representations is intentionally false. During his testimony at the evidentiary hearing, Dr. Wright made a point of being precise in his use of terms, including contesting whether a document was an email or a pdf of an email. It is not credible that, given his claim to have an unmatched understanding of Bitcoin, he would have mistaken the Bitcoin currency for the keys that control the ability to transfer the currency. I find instead that he belatedly realized that any transaction(s) transferring bitcoin into the alleged Tulip Trust would be reflected on the Bitcoin master blockchain, that he would then be required to identify those transaction(s), and that Plaintiffs could use that information to trace the bitcoin.
So, Dr. Wright changed his story to say that only the keys had been transferred. Ultimately, Dr. Wright’s claim of inability to comply with the Court’s Orders relies on the existence of an encrypted file in the Tulip Trust containing the information necessary to reconstruct Dr. Wright’s bitcoin holdings. I find that this file does not exist.
Dr. Wright testified this file is an encrypted compressed file containing multiple sub-files. He swore, “Each of those files has a differently calculated encryption key . . . It’s a hierarchical system, where, based on a combination of the file hash and the original encryption key – there are a variety of those – there are multiple Shamir schemes.” DE 236 at 107. The Shamir scheme divides a single encryption key into multiple key slices; some subset of the total key slices is needed to decrypt the file.13 Dr. Wright testified that 15 key slices existed for the outermost file, only eight key slices were needed to decrypt this file, but he only had access to seven key slices. DE 236 at 125-26; see also DE 236 at 114 (“The eight of 15 is the key that we’re talking about to regenerate all of the addresses”). After observing Dr. Wright’s demeanor and the lack of any other credible evidence in the record that this file exists, I find that a preponderance of the evidence establishes that no such file exists and that Dr. Wright’s testimony was intentionally false. https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536.277.0.pdfThe testimony is 'false' but just in case there is a 'Tulip Fund' he is still on the hook for the $2 Billion Dollars in BTC if he has access to such funds? or He has to pay the estate $2 Billion Dollars because they can prove he ripped off the Bitcoin? or Nothing comes of this, because when the time comes to pay (after 1/1/2020) Craig Wright (FakeSatoshi) will announce the 'evil' trustees of the 'supposed' Tulip Fund, has run off with the private keys and as such, as usual, he will 'claim' his bad luck and innocence and move onward and ever forward with his fake claim to be Satoshi. I mean, on any of the above is there any real consequences? (I refuse to believe he can pay the estate that is just too far fetched) but on his flat out lies? Seems little or NO consequences in that this is a USA court and he is Australian. Anyone, want to show me how he can be hung out to dry on his claims and/or how he can continue to get away with this scam, feel free to reply. I've already heard from Craig Wright believers that because the court says he has to pay, regardless if he has/can find/or whatever with the BTC private keys, he must be Satoshi! (the mind cringes from the lack of logic) Anyway, seems to be still a muddled mess, he can squeak his way out of without any real consequences to his continued lies. Brad
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Searing
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Clueless!
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August 28, 2019, 03:53:45 AM |
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More: Counsel for Dr. Wright argued that it would be fundamentally unfair to Dr. Wright, and contrary to concepts of justice to impose discovery sanctions that forfeited his right to fully litigate the merits of his case. I have found that Dr. Wright intentionally submitted fraudulent documents to the Court, obstructed a judicial proceeding, and gave perjurious testimony. No conduct is more antithetical to the administration of justice. The sanctions I am imposing are necessary to achieve the remedial and punitive purposes of Rule 37. No lesser sanction would suffice.
I think that’s lawyer talk for CSW is fucking REKT. The testimony is 'false' but just in case there is a 'Tulip Fund' he is still on the hook for the $2 Billion Dollars in BTC if he has access to such funds? or He has to pay the estate $2 Billion Dollars because they can prove he ripped off the Bitcoin? or Nothing comes of this, because when the time comes to pay (after 1/1/2020) Craig Wright (FakeSatoshi) will announce the 'evil' trustees of the 'supposed' Tulip Fund, has run off with the private keys and as such, as usual, he will 'claim his bad luck and innocence and move onward and ever forward with his fake claim to be Satoshi. I mean, on any of the above is there any real consequences? (I refuse to believe he can pay the estate that is just too far fetched) but on his flat out lies? Seems little or NO consequences in that this is a USA court and he is Australian. Anyone, want to show me how he can be hung out to dry on his claims and/or how he can continue to get away with this scam, feel free to reply. I've already heard from Craig Wright believers that because the court says he has to pay, regardless if he has/can find/or whatever with the BTC private keys, he must be Satoshi! (the mind cringes from the lack of logic) Anyway, seems to be still a muddled mess, he can squeak his way out of without any real consequences to his continued lies. Brad
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VB1001
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<<CypherPunkCat>>
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August 28, 2019, 05:04:00 AM Merited by fillippone (1) |
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Telling data from @CoinMetrics:
~50% of $BTC’s current realized cap is made up of coins that have a cost basis which is > than current prices. This is down from ~74% which were “in the red” on 1/1/18. Now there's much more solid base of $BTC built up in the $3k-$12K than before https://twitter.com/chrisrussi/status/1166387580809568256
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HairyMaclairy
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Degenerate bull hatter & Bitcoin monotheist
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August 28, 2019, 05:10:15 AM Last edit: August 28, 2019, 06:32:31 AM by HairyMaclairy |
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The judge ruled that there was no such thing as the Tulip Trust (it doesn’t exist). The judge also ruled that if Craig mined any bitcoins as of 2013, half of them belong to Kleiman. He hasn’t yet ruled on whether Craig mined any Bitcoins as of that date. Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(A)(i), the Court deems the following facts to be established for purposes of this action: (1) Dr. Wright and David Kleiman entered into a 50/50 partnership to develop Bitcoin intellectual property and to mine bitcoin; (2) any Bitcoin-related intellectual property developed by Dr. Wright prior to David Kleiman’s death was property of the partnership, (3) all bitcoin mined by Dr. Wright prior to David Kleiman’s death (“the partnership’s bitcoin”) was property of the partnership when mined; and (4) Plaintiffs presently retain an ownership interest in the partnership’s bitcoin, and any assets traceable to them.
REKT The judge also said he wasn’t going to rule on whether or not CSW was Satoshi because it was irrelevant. Two preliminary points. First, the Court is not required to decide, and does not decide, whether Defendant Dr. Craig Wright is Satoshi Nakamoto, the inventor of the Bitcoin cybercurrency.2 The Court also is not required to decide, and does not decide, how much bitcoin, if any, Dr. Wright controls today. For purposes of this proceeding, the Court accepts Dr. Wright’s representation that he controlled (directly or indirectly) some bitcoin on December 31, 2013, and that he continues to control some today.
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fillippone
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Fully fledged Merit Cycler - Golden Feather 22-23
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August 28, 2019, 06:54:20 AM Last edit: August 28, 2019, 07:49:08 AM by fillippone |
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Who i'd prefer to have BTC1MM:
3-Hal, Andreas, some core devs... (people who deserve it) ...
Hal is long time dead, sadly. Know more about him: everyone should: https://101blockchains.com/who-is-hal-finney-bitcoin/
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fillippone
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August 28, 2019, 06:55:54 AM |
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A little, yet very important for bitcoin, history lesson: https://wtfhappenedin1971.com/
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Icygreen
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August 28, 2019, 06:57:05 AM Last edit: August 28, 2019, 07:10:47 AM by Icygreen |
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snip FTFY
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SuperTA
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August 28, 2019, 07:40:58 AM Last edit: August 28, 2019, 07:58:54 AM by SuperTA Merited by JayJuanGee (1), mr_random (1) |
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How to prepare for the next recession 3 charts showing you when the next recession will probably occur. The first Chart shows you the yield curve inverted for at least 30 straight days. You can see when this happened before the recession occured not many months after that. The second chart showing you when the fed lowers interest rates. The Fed lowered interest rates for the first time after 2008. Whenever this happens it brings the financial crisis in the near future. Financial crisis are marked with the grey area. The third chart shows you when exactly will this happen. When will the financial crisis officially occur. This always happens when the blue line on the 3rd chart crosses above the yellow line. That happened before, right before 2008 and 2000 crisis. What to do: I think that bitcoin will do very well in the financial crisis. Bitcoin was made because of this. I think that gold and silver will do fine as well. Even if the price drops a little bit i think in the middle and the long term bitcoin will outperform every major asset in the world. Disclaimer: This is just my personal opinion, not the financial advice
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DaRude
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In order to dump coins one must have coins
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August 28, 2019, 07:57:53 AM |
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Yeah i'm aware that Hal hasn't been with us for past 5yrs now, meant his descendants/whoever has access to his frozen brain
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mindrust
Legendary
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Activity: 3430
Merit: 2539
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August 28, 2019, 08:11:53 AM Merited by JayJuanGee (1) |
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Just saw this on reddit: Source"The charts never lie"
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SuperTA
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August 28, 2019, 08:16:54 AM Last edit: August 28, 2019, 08:31:31 AM by SuperTA |
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Yea, i was trying to find out the method of his/her predictions. After some time of experimenting with many indicators i found out that his/her price and time predictions were perfectly matching the fibonnaci circle indicators. (longterm and the short term combined)
That's how i discovered that the 87,00$ prediction is probably a miss-typed mistake because there is a fibonnaci circle right at the 87.000 usd (november 2020)
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El duderino_
Legendary
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Activity: 2688
Merit: 13352
BTC + Crossfit, living life.
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August 28, 2019, 08:29:39 AM |
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I posit that hodlers would probably do very well in a marshmallow test (when they were kids). I doubt that anyone here was tested, so....
The question is: who is the strongest btc hodler on WO? Possible qualifications: never sold any bitcoin (holdling at least since the peak in 2013 or earlier) for fiat and/or alts and forks. Direct purchasing of things is OK since without spending there would be no btc success story. Come forward, tell the story and let us admire your persistence against all odds.
First start with your story
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