bodhipraxis
Newbie
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Activity: 56
Merit: 0
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June 21, 2011, 04:48:30 AM |
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Tradehill is run from a shared hosting account on hostgator.
Dedicated Hosting: tradehill.com is hosted on a dedicated server. http://whois.domaintools.com/tradehill.comreverse IP look up says zero sites other than tradehill.com hosted at their IP address. So I'd like to know how did you come to the conclusion that tradehill is being hosted at a "shared hosting account on hostgator"? I can tell you that with a few keystrokes, it was easy to determine that tradehill is in no way on a freakin' "shared hosting account on hostgator"..they are not even hosted in the U.S, idiot(s). Their hosting is professional, dedicated, and on-par with I would expect from such an effort. I am not going to post their domain info, but it is easy to find, if you know what you are doing.
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niemivh
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June 21, 2011, 06:47:14 AM |
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Tradehill is run from a shared hosting account on hostgator.
that is some pretty serious lulz I lulled. *pulls BTC to thumbdrives*
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I'll keep my politics out of your economics if you keep your economics out of my politics.
16LdMA6pCgq9ULrstHmiwwwbGe1BJQyDqr
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niemivh
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June 21, 2011, 06:49:58 AM |
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You're FOOLS if you think MtGox getting fucked meant ANYTHING to bitcoins.
FOOLS!
Uh, it means we can buy at lower prices. And security just went up ten fold. No, no, you see, you completely misunderstand bitcoins. Mt. Gox has nothing to do with bitcoins you stupid oaf. Bitcoins are untouchable and exist completely outside the control of any single entity, why are you so stupid that you don't understand this. You're just like all those dumbasses in the media that get trival facts about bitcoin wrong in EVERY article they write. And you're just like all the morons that post comments on those articles affirming all their misperceptions about bitcoin. YOU DON'T GET IT. NO ONE HERE GETS IT. BITCOIN is safe and always was. MtGox getting hacked means fuck all to this movement. Now either get out of the kiddy pool or make way for the big fish cause you're getting stupider by the moment. Yeah yeah, but you do understand that Bitcoins would be worth next to nothing in USD (or 'real' money) if there wasn't for the exchanges? Are Bitcoins as an abstraction really that cool? Thought the point was to use them to buy stuff.
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I'll keep my politics out of your economics if you keep your economics out of my politics.
16LdMA6pCgq9ULrstHmiwwwbGe1BJQyDqr
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bodhipraxis
Newbie
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Activity: 56
Merit: 0
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June 21, 2011, 06:58:18 AM |
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You're FOOLS if you think MtGox getting fucked meant ANYTHING to bitcoins.
FOOLS!
Uh, it means we can buy at lower prices. And security just went up ten fold. No, no, you see, you completely misunderstand bitcoins. Mt. Gox has nothing to do with bitcoins you stupid oaf. Bitcoins are untouchable and exist completely outside the control of any single entity, why are you so stupid that you don't understand this. You're just like all those dumbasses in the media that get trival facts about bitcoin wrong in EVERY article they write. And you're just like all the morons that post comments on those articles affirming all their misperceptions about bitcoin. YOU DON'T GET IT. NO ONE HERE GETS IT. BITCOIN is safe and always was. MtGox getting hacked means fuck all to this movement. Now either get out of the kiddy pool or make way for the big fish cause you're getting stupider by the moment. Yeah yeah, but you do understand that Bitcoins would be worth next to nothing in USD (or 'real' money) if there wasn't for the exchanges? Are Bitcoins as an abstraction really that cool? Thought the point was to use them to buy stuff. Note to all: there are tools (publicly available) that will assure you of the hosting of Tradehill's servers. No, not stupid web whois and reverse dns parsers. But it took me all of 90 seconds to assure myself that the poster was barking up a troll tree.
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bitcoinBull
Legendary
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Activity: 826
Merit: 1001
rippleFanatic
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June 21, 2011, 07:36:48 AM |
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Re: Tradehill hosting. 46.21.104.237 resolves to "46-21-104-237-static.serverhotell.net" Top Level Domain: "serverhotell.net"
http://serverhotell.net -> http://glesys.se/serverhotell.php -> http://glesys.com/Tradehill seems to be hosted by swedish company glesys.com. TH themselves should've been the first to stop this rumor (which was probably a joke originally) [you're welcome guys].
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College of Bucking Bulls Knowledge
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ones51
Member
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Activity: 70
Merit: 10
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June 21, 2011, 01:58:35 PM |
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Tradehill is run from a shared hosting account on hostgator.
Dedicated Hosting: tradehill.com is hosted on a dedicated server. http://whois.domaintools.com/tradehill.comreverse IP look up says zero sites other than tradehill.com hosted at their IP address. So I'd like to know how did you come to the conclusion that tradehill is being hosted at a "shared hosting account on hostgator"? I'd like to know too! Lardycake? Lol! People will believe anything these days. No man, the truth is their host is angelfire. Get the fact straight.
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3phase
Sr. Member
Offline
Activity: 313
Merit: 251
Third score
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June 21, 2011, 03:09:30 PM |
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LOL! I was reading this fast and i read "servertohell". Then I realized I was wrong, but for a second, I thought "OMG, tradehill is doomed..." Goes to show how emotional I can be when things are unstable... I need to calm down.
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dacoinminster
Legendary
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Activity: 1260
Merit: 1031
Rational Exuberance
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June 21, 2011, 03:21:21 PM |
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There are a lot of stolen coins out there right now. How much you wanna bet many of them are being unloaded on tradehill as we speak?
If you can stomach profiting from the misfortune of others, go on a buying spree at the pawn shop TradeHill.
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imperi
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June 21, 2011, 03:22:52 PM |
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Well TradeHill used to be hosted on Geocities but they upgraded to Hostgator when Geocities closed.
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The_Duke
Sr. Member
Offline
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
Lead Core BitKitty Developer
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June 21, 2011, 03:32:44 PM |
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Well TradeHill used to be hosted on Geocities but they upgraded to Hostgator when Geocities closed.
For me it resolves to http://home.aol.com/users/~tradehill04
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NOT a member of the so called ''Bitcoin Foundation''. Choose Independence!
Donate to the BitKitty Foundation instead! -> 1Fd4yLneGmxRHnPi6WCMC2hAMzaWvDePF9 <-
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finnthecelt
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June 21, 2011, 03:37:20 PM |
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As far as I'm concerned there is no such thing as stolen bitcoins...
I mean what exactly is it that's stolen? It's a number that represents an amount of computational power.
What happened may be illegal but it's not theft, maybe fraud from the hacker for selling in somebody elses name.
Let's all sing the Rationalizaiton song togehter.......!!!! "R is for reject............etc.
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aral
Newbie
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Activity: 42
Merit: 0
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June 21, 2011, 03:45:40 PM |
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There are a lot of stolen coins out there right now. How much you wanna bet many of them are being unloaded on tradehill as we speak?
If you can stomach profiting from the misfortune of others, go on a buying spree at the pawn shop TradeHill.
Would it be possible to track the addresses of the stolen coins? Not that anything can be done about it really, just would be interesting to see what happens to them.
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digimag
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June 21, 2011, 04:11:59 PM |
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You can also trade at bitmarket.eu.
It's the website of my choice.
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17opQsbw8873x4PTwzvacEjNR2a59mSxoT
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makomk
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June 21, 2011, 04:19:26 PM |
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There are a lot of stolen coins out there right now. How much you wanna bet many of them are being unloaded on tradehill as we speak?
If you can stomach profiting from the misfortune of others, go on a buying spree at the pawn shop TradeHill.
Of course, MagicalTux has consistently refused to identify the stolen coins in the most recent breach, and many older stolen coins have almost certainly already been unloaded via MtGox by now, and it's not like it would've been difficult for the attacker to have laundered them through services that make it impossible to identify where the stolen coins came from or who has them now so it doesn't matter which service you use... but don't let that stop you from using MtGox's fail as a way to discredit its competitors.
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Quad XC6SLX150 Board: 860 MHash/s or so. SIGS ABOUT BUTTERFLY LABS ARE PAID ADS
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dacoinminster
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1260
Merit: 1031
Rational Exuberance
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June 21, 2011, 04:35:36 PM |
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Of course, MagicalTux has consistently refused to identify the stolen coins in the most recent breach, and many older stolen coins have almost certainly already been unloaded via MtGox by now, and it's not like it would've been difficult for the attacker to have laundered them through services that make it impossible to identify where the stolen coins came from or who has them now so it doesn't matter which service you use... but don't let that stop you from using MtGox's fail as a way to discredit its competitors.
I'm in no way discrediting TradeHill.com - I use them all the time myself, and I think they are great. Just pointing out that if you are getting bargains there (or anywhere else right now), it is because of all the stolen coins.
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foggyb
Legendary
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Activity: 1736
Merit: 1006
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June 21, 2011, 04:43:03 PM |
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As far as I'm concerned there is no such thing as stolen bitcoins...
I mean what exactly is it that's stolen? It's a number that represents an amount of computational power.
What happened may be illegal but it's not theft, maybe fraud from the hacker for selling in somebody elses name.
According to your argument, electronic bank fraud is not theft. After all its a number that represents an amount of economic, political, and military power.
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finnthecelt
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June 21, 2011, 05:16:02 PM |
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As far as I'm concerned there is no such thing as stolen bitcoins...
I mean what exactly is it that's stolen? It's a number that represents an amount of computational power.
What happened may be illegal but it's not theft, maybe fraud from the hacker for selling in somebody elses name.
According to your argument, electronic bank fraud is not theft. After all its a number that represents an amount of economic, political, and military power. I think this guy should read Atlas' post on the creation of wealth and the ownership of that wealth. And then take some ethics classes. If I smashed down his front door, took his computer/wallet, according to him that would not be theft. Why? Because the BTC therein are nothging more than a series of computations and the computer iteself a "collage" of molecules representing the figment of imagination. Not really real at all so nothing to be stole! The door? A mental block. Another figment of imagination to cast aside. Rubbish!
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imperi
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June 21, 2011, 05:17:32 PM |
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As far as I'm concerned there is no such thing as stolen bitcoins...
I mean what exactly is it that's stolen? It's a number that represents an amount of computational power.
What happened may be illegal but it's not theft, maybe fraud from the hacker for selling in somebody elses name.
According to your argument, electronic bank fraud is not theft. After all its a number that represents an amount of economic, political, and military power. I think this guy should read Atlas' post on the creation of wealth and the ownership of that wealth. And then take some ethics classes. If I smashed down his front door, took his computer/wallet, according to him that would not be theft. Why? Because the BTC therein are nothging more than a series of computations and the computer iteself a "collage" of molecules representing the figment of imagination. Not really real at all so nothing to be stole! The door? A mental block. Another figment of imagination to cast aside. Rubbish! You only represent a group of molecules. Why should I care if I run you over on a crosswalk?
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finnthecelt
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June 21, 2011, 05:20:45 PM |
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As far as I'm concerned there is no such thing as stolen bitcoins...
I mean what exactly is it that's stolen? It's a number that represents an amount of computational power.
What happened may be illegal but it's not theft, maybe fraud from the hacker for selling in somebody elses name.
According to your argument, electronic bank fraud is not theft. After all its a number that represents an amount of economic, political, and military power. I think this guy should read Atlas' post on the creation of wealth and the ownership of that wealth. And then take some ethics classes. If I smashed down his front door, took his computer/wallet, according to him that would not be theft. Why? Because the BTC therein are nothging more than a series of computations and the computer iteself a "collage" of molecules representing the figment of imagination. Not really real at all so nothing to be stole! The door? A mental block. Another figment of imagination to cast aside. Rubbish! You only represent a group of molecules. Why should I care if I run you over on a crosswalk? Because you don't know if my consciousness exists separately from the miniscule mass. That's why.
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rebuilder
Legendary
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Activity: 1615
Merit: 1000
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June 21, 2011, 05:29:18 PM |
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You only represent a group of molecules. Why should I care if I run you over on a crosswalk?
Because you don't know if my consciousness exists separately from the miniscule mass. That's why. Hey, I don't even know if you have such a thing as "consciousness". Anyway, I do believe imperi was being facetious.
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Selling out to advertisers shows you respect neither yourself nor the rest of us. --------------------------------------------------------------- Too many low-quality posts? Mods not keeping things clean enough? Self-moderated threads let you keep signature spammers and trolls out!
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