luv2drnkbr (OP)
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June 20, 2011, 02:47:40 AM |
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I had no money on them, nor did I profit or loss form what happened (although there I am, right in the database!). I still think the rollback is a terrible idea. They should pay out of pocket to those who were hurt by this and let those who profited keep their profit. It was no one's fault, and a lot of innocent people who made money in what they thought was a legitimate fashion are magicallytux going to lose that money. That's not right. It might be a huge hit, but it's the only way to salvage their reputation.
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Astro
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June 20, 2011, 02:49:18 AM |
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fraud begets fraud, period.
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Adam
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June 20, 2011, 02:49:56 AM |
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If 260k bitcoins were sold at .01 each there is no way they could reimburse that, nor is it really fair that a few lucky people got to take advantage of the deal.
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unk
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June 20, 2011, 02:50:36 AM |
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here's a simpler way to understand it (i've given more complex ways in other threads): a 'rollback' helps nobody but the theft victim and mt. gox, which is presumably planning it for selfish reasons, not for reasons that aid anyone else.
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stillfire
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June 20, 2011, 03:00:43 AM |
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A rollback helps anyone who relies on the exchange facilitating voluntary trades between pairs of informed individuals. All trades done during the time when the hashed passwords were in the wild are not only suspect but at least one party of each trade in the big selloff was engaging in it involuntarily.
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unk
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June 20, 2011, 03:04:24 AM |
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the very purpose of a formal exchange is to abstract away such problems. you don't ask, when trading standardized options, whether somebody has entered into the option with their eyes open; it's as formal as a contract ever gets.
currency markets are similar, and what mt. gox is proposing is truly unprecedented in that context and does not inspire confidence.
as i suggested in another topic, just for argument's sake, what evidence does the public (anyone outside of mt. gox) have that there even was an attack? how would anyone know that it wasn't a large holder of bitcoins who was trying to sell, hoping to get a decent price from large dark pools he or she suspected existed? then, unhappy with the total price received from the bulk sale, this large holder could have then asked or paid mt. gox to roll things back.
i'm not suggesting that happened, but how would anyone know? many following the live data as it was happening assumed that it was simply a large holder of bitcoins selling, and that's not an unreasonable assumption.
the reason i ask is that people who did act on the data were not unreasonable to do so; a rollback for them is a presumably an odd surprise.
again, i have no personal stake in mt. gox's decision here. i just think they're being glib and heavy-handed, and the lack of transparency is frustrating. i never opened an account, indeed, in part because of similarly heavy-handed things they did in the past. a rollback here does not strike me as a professional response, at least without considerably more information, audited by a third party.
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TriumVir
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June 20, 2011, 03:07:29 AM |
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a 'rollback' helps nobody but the theft victim and mt. gox
Whom for all we know are one and the same . . .
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stillfire
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June 20, 2011, 03:11:47 AM |
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I did respond to your speculation that maybe there wasn't even an attack in the other thread where you posted it.
As far as whether this is unprecedented or not, some on these forums say it's common for exchanges to cancel trades, but I am not familiar with the matter. Regardless, MtGox's terms of use presumably allow it, or if the terms are not explicit, then nothing forbids it.
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unk
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June 20, 2011, 03:13:06 AM |
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a 'rollback' helps nobody but the theft victim and mt. gox
Whom for all we know are one and the same . . . yes, exactly. well said. but again, i don't mean to suggest that specifically. my point is that the action of a rollback is largely a selfish one; they can present it as public-regarding, but that's a marketing move, not an honest one. a rollback does not do anything for the bitcoin technology, for innocent bystanders, or for innocent traders whose accounts were not compromised. of course, people are expressing separate doubts about whether mt. gox has all the bitcoins it claims to have. fortunately, there are ways mt. gox could prove that using commitments or reorganizations of funds in the block chain even without a third-party auditor. if i were mt. gox, i'd want to develop an easily documented protocol to prove to each user that i still held that user's funds, and if i were a user of mt. gox i would never consider letting them hold my funds otherwise. this sort of proof is very easy to achieve, and i would be happy to explain several ways of doing it if that would be helpful. without it, people are engaging simply in blind trust.
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unk
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June 20, 2011, 03:16:58 AM |
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As far as whether this is unprecedented or not, some on these forums say it's common for exchanges to cancel trades, but I am not familiar with the matter. Regardless, MtGox's terms of use presumably allow it, or if the terms are not explicit, then nothing forbids it.
i challenge anyone to cite one example from a reputable currency (or even commodities) exchange. and the absence of a restriction in a contract does not give the party who happens to have power freedom to do anything in a contractual relationship. that's not the contract law of the united states, the united kingdom, or japan, at least. instead, terms are implied based typically on trade usage, and implied terms are just as binding as express ones.
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Rodyland
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June 20, 2011, 03:29:16 AM |
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i challenge anyone to cite one example from a reputable currency (or even commodities) exchange.
I work for a stockbroker, and I can tell you that at least on equities exchanges, trades can be and are cancelled. It's a big deal, you can't just say "oops changed my mind", but it does happen. Normally a cancellation requires the consent of both parties involved. And generally the "beneficiary" of an erroneous trade will consent, but not always (search the news recently for the fat-finger error on a Japanese exchange that the broker was forced to deliver upon). But this is MtGox, not the NYSE, and they make their own rules, so if they decide to rollback a trade then you can complain to the SEC... oh that's right you can't. The only question I have is - "how?" Unless MtGox were quick enough to disable withdrawals on accounts once the fit hit the shan, if any of the "suspect" btc have been withdrawn, then there is not much they can do I don't think. I know I was a "beneficiary" of the crash... I had some bids in the market a good distance from market price, hoping to grab a few cheap btc if the price dipped this weekend like it did last, and all of my orders were executed. Interesting times...
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Beware the weak hands! 1NcL6Mjm4qeiYYi2rpoCtQopPrH4PyKfUC GPG ID: E3AA41E3
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unk
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June 20, 2011, 03:35:52 AM |
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i challenge anyone to cite one example from a reputable currency (or even commodities) exchange.
I work for a stockbroker, and I can tell you that at least on equities exchanges, trades can be and are cancelled. It's a big deal, you can't just say "oops changed my mind", but it does happen. Normally a cancellation requires the consent of both parties involved. And generally the "beneficiary" of an erroneous trade will consent, but not always (search the news recently for the fat-finger error on a Japanese exchange that the broker was forced to deliver upon). right, but this was why i emphasized currency exchangers. equities markets are indeed different. and even there, as you say, it usually requires consent, which is usually given because the parties are repeat players and don't gain long-term from taking advantage of someone else's mechanical error. even in the equities markets, however, it would almost never happen in cases where a broker was the target of identity theft. again, i challenge anyone to come up with a single real-world example along those lines. it's different from a NASDAQ market maker accidentally quoting 10,000 shares instead of 1,000 to another market maker that it's dealt with for ten years. again, this was not an exchange or order problem. someone stole bitcoins and sold them. they just happened to steal them from the party that was acting as the exchange. But this is MtGox, not the NYSE, and they make their own rules, so if they decide to rollback a trade then you can complain to the SEC... oh that's right you can't.
there are still regulators. mt. gox is not 'unregulated'; it just sometimes seem to act that way. i'm not sure what the regulators would do here, though. if nothing else, there is private contract law. mt. gox isn't operating in a lawless jungle where it can do whatever it wants because it happens to have power. that's why i say that their response seems glib and heavy-handed to me.
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mouse
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June 20, 2011, 04:21:58 AM |
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if i were mt. gox, i'd want to develop an easily documented protocol to prove to each user that i still held that user's funds, and if i were a user of mt. gox i would never consider letting them hold my funds otherwise. this sort of proof is very easy to achieve, and i would be happy to explain several ways of doing it if that would be helpful. without it, people are engaging simply in blind trust.
Please explain (I'm actually interested in hearing about this idea)
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Vladimir
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June 20, 2011, 05:12:30 AM |
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As far as whether this is unprecedented or not, some on these forums say it's common for exchanges to cancel trades, but I am not familiar with the matter. Regardless, MtGox's terms of use presumably allow it, or if the terms are not explicit, then nothing forbids it.
i challenge anyone to cite one example from a reputable currency (or even commodities) exchange. and the absence of a restriction in a contract does not give the party who happens to have power freedom to do anything in a contractual relationship. that's not the contract law of the united states, the united kingdom, or japan, at least. instead, terms are implied based typically on trade usage, and implied terms are just as binding as express ones. Yep. Implied terms are in force in absence of formal contract and this does not help mtgox one bit. They said that they are talking to lawyers and the same time they have not even published any terms and conditions or company registration details or contact details. I am not familiar with prevailing legislation in Japan but in UK and EU only failure to disclose contact and registration details would get them in serious legal troubles even if they were just selling dog turds. But they are playing into a financial institution and taking deposits. This is all freaking unbelievable. The first lawyer they would talk to would raise hell about this as the first matter of business. This is extremely amateurish...
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