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Doff
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March 10, 2014, 06:18:23 PM
 #3561

Many questions were posted last night.  Please allow time before my responses as I'm not going be sitting infront of the computer 24/7.  If you want something to actually get done that is.

I'm sorry but it took me about 15 minutes to read all the posts last night, and about 10 minutes while working to catch up this morning.

I am confused why this takes you 24/7 to accomplish, and what I think what we would all like to know is what the hell you are doing when you aren't posting here.

But how many hours were in between? People are expecting a response within 5 minutes of their post.

That's the point of a forum you should never really expect a quick reply, however there have been large gaps between when you actually do post. Then we get this flurry like right now.

Its frustrating is all.
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Bitcoin mining is now a specialized and very risky industry, just like gold mining. Amateur miners are unlikely to make much money, and may even lose money. Bitcoin is much more than just mining, though!
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Endlessa
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March 10, 2014, 06:19:45 PM
 #3562

Many questions were posted last night.  Please allow time before my responses as I'm not going be sitting infront of the computer 24/7.  If you want something to actually get done that is.

I'm sorry but it took me about 15 minutes to read all the posts last night, and about 10 minutes while working to catch up this morning.

I am confused why this takes you 24/7 to accomplish, and what I think what we would all like to know is what the hell you are doing when you aren't posting here.

But how many hours were in between? People are expecting a response within 5 minutes of their post.

no we are expecting a complete picture when you drop a bombshell and for you to responsibly present information when you reduce the value of our investment to 0.001% of your previous valuation of bonds.
Doff
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March 10, 2014, 06:21:42 PM
 #3563

Many questions were posted last night.  Please allow time before my responses as I'm not going be sitting infront of the computer 24/7.  If you want something to actually get done that is.

I'm sorry but it took me about 15 minutes to read all the posts last night, and about 10 minutes while working to catch up this morning.

I am confused why this takes you 24/7 to accomplish, and what I think what we would all like to know is what the hell you are doing when you aren't posting here.

But how many hours were in between? People are expecting a response within 5 minutes of their post.

no we are expecting a complete picture when you drop a bombshell and for you to responsibly present information when you reduce the value of our investment to 0.001% of your previous valuation of bonds.

This too, whats currently on the website just pooped all over this investment. I put in 13 coins I expected 13 back, with the current proposition ill never see that happen.
rangerbob21
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March 10, 2014, 06:21:47 PM
 #3564

I am not averse to the risk associated with the purchase of the bonds and I am aware that the investment may lose value. I am simply averse to the new terms implemented by the management of LRM. My risk was, still is and should only be pinned to the bitcoin markets et. al, not the seeming whims of LRM to change the terms without my explicit consent.

So, if I do not agree with the new terms do I get my original investment back in kind? I still believe this to be a completely fair question.
Lab_Rat (OP)
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March 10, 2014, 06:22:52 PM
 #3565

no we are expecting a complete picture when you drop a bombshell and for you to responsibly present information

I'm working on doing so and all I have done is provide an immediate fix that does fit into the original contract promises, with the intent to find a way to benefit early contract purchasers as more hardware comes in.

||bit
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March 10, 2014, 06:23:12 PM
 #3566

There are certain important connections that are still in place, but there are things changing in the BTC hardware manufacturing community that are not my place to comment on.

Changes in BTC hardware are not important to the real concerns of people here. The biggest concerns are your intentions with their investments, and how well it correlates with the spirit of the original agreement told/sold to people. The right answer would be enough to calm people down and give you breathing space. No answer or a bad answer could get people in gear for a legal response.

I do think your splitting the contracts into three is a good sign. But knowing you are willing to keep doing this if needed would be helpful to know.
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March 10, 2014, 06:25:42 PM
 #3567

With the change to the original terms, If I do not agree, do I get my original 1 BTC investment back? Fair question, I think.

The very question implies a complete lack of understanding of the investment you have made. Your original 1 BTC investement, for accounting purposes, is converted to USD at the time it is was made. The tax system does not function under BTC - think of it as if you had bought Euros or Yen six months ago and then sold them today at a loss or a gain. Furthermore, the market is the place you go to sell your bonds (or whatever the hell they are actually supposed to be called) just like you would with any company where you wanted to sell your stake. There is no right of redemption in the "real world" of investments, nor should one be implied with any investment in the wild west of BTC land.  

I do not intend this reply as a defense of LRM or any other company in the world of BTC but rather as a comment on the seemingly basic and essential lack of understanding regarding accounting and business that seems to come through loud and clear when the shit hits the fan(s).

Also, while I took a pretty hard stance towards LRM in my initial reaction to this situation, I await further guidance from Zach, particularly in regards to the disposition of the incoming hardware, before a decision that this is bad or good. In fact, this may turn out very, very well not only for us but also for the entire space that this kind of business is working within. Its the bleeding edge people. Get your red blood cell count up because you might bleed a little more before its done.
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March 10, 2014, 06:26:34 PM
 #3568

Many questions were posted last night.  Please allow time before my responses as I'm not going be sitting infront of the computer 24/7.  If you want something to actually get done that is.

I'm sorry but it took me about 15 minutes to read all the posts last night, and about 10 minutes while working to catch up this morning.

I am confused why this takes you 24/7 to accomplish, and what I think what we would all like to know is what the hell you are doing when you aren't posting here.

But how many hours were in between? People are expecting a response within 5 minutes of their post.

no we are expecting a complete picture when you drop a bombshell and for you to responsibly present information when you reduce the value of our investment to 0.001% of your previous valuation of bonds.

This too, whats currently on the website just pooped all over this investment. I put in 13 coins I expected 13 back, with the current proposition ill never see that happen.

correction: 0.01% of original value (forgot the percent contains two decimals, don't want to exaggerate)
Lab_Rat (OP)
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March 10, 2014, 06:26:48 PM
 #3569

I am not averse to the risk associated with the purchase of the bonds and I am aware that the investment may lose value. I am simply averse to the new terms implemented by the management of LRM. My risk was, still is and should only be pinned to the bitcoin markets et. al, not the seeming whims of LRM to change the terms without my explicit consent.

So, if I do not agree with the new terms do I get my original investment back in kind? I still believe this to be a completely fair question.

Now it was worded with respect and reason as well as direction so I know how to respond.

Please read my post above.  I'm not looking to screw anyone over, but I'm going to do what I have to.

Also notice that there are disclaimers allowing for the contract to be changed as necessary to maintain legality and that contract holders do not have voting rights.

ICantThinkOfaName
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March 10, 2014, 06:27:49 PM
 #3570

no we are expecting a complete picture when you drop a bombshell and for you to responsibly present information

I'm working on doing so and all I have done is provide an immediate fix that does fit into the original contract promises, with the intent to find a way to benefit early contract purchasers as more hardware comes in.

You DO realize that's the first time you've actually said that to us since you changed the terms, right?
Endlessa
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March 10, 2014, 06:29:38 PM
 #3571

With the change to the original terms, If I do not agree, do I get my original 1 BTC investment back? Fair question, I think.

The very question implies a complete lack of understanding of the investment you have made. Your original 1 BTC investement, for accounting purposes, is converted to USD at the time it is was made. The tax system does not function under BTC - think of it as if you had bought Euros or Yen six months ago and then sold them today at a loss or a gain. Furthermore, the market is the place you go to sell your bonds (or whatever the hell they are actually supposed to be called) just like you would with any company where you wanted to sell your stake. There is no right of redemption in the "real world" of investments, nor should one be implied with any investment in the wild west of BTC land.  

I do not intend this reply as a defense of LRM or any other company in the world of BTC but rather as a comment on the seemingly basic and essential lack of understanding regarding accounting and business that seems to come through loud and clear when the shit hits the fan(s).

Also, while I took a pretty hard stance towards LRM in my initial reaction to this situation, I await further guidance from Zach, particularly in regards to the disposition of the incoming hardware, before a decision that this is bad or good. In fact, this may turn out very, very well not only for us but also for the entire space that this kind of business is working within. Its the bleeding edge people, get your red blood cell count up because you might bleed a little more before its done.

that only makes sense if they are valued in USD.  LR values and continued to sell them in BTC, so reguardless of the USD conversion rate, these commodities were value, traded and sold in BTC.  for tax purposes you declare the value in USD, but it doesn't change the current value, whether you choose to declare it in USD or BTC.
Lab_Rat (OP)
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March 10, 2014, 06:30:00 PM
 #3572

With the change to the original terms, If I do not agree, do I get my original 1 BTC investment back? Fair question, I think.

The very question implies a complete lack of understanding of the investment you have made. Your original 1 BTC investement, for accounting purposes, is converted to USD at the time it is was made. The tax system does not function under BTC - think of it as if you had bought Euros or Yen six months ago and then sold them today at a loss or a gain. Furthermore, the market is the place you go to sell your bonds (or whatever the hell they are actually supposed to be called) just like you would with any company where you wanted to sell your stake. There is no right of redemption in the "real world" of investments, nor should one be implied with any investment in the wild west of BTC land.  

I do not intend this reply as a defense of LRM or any other company in the world of BTC but rather as a comment on the seemingly basic and essential lack of understanding regarding accounting and business that seems to come through loud and clear when the shit hits the fan(s).

Also, while I took a pretty hard stance towards LRM in my initial reaction to this situation, I await further guidance from Zach, particularly in regards to the disposition of the incoming hardware, before a decision that this is bad or good. In fact, this may turn out very, very well not only for us but also for the entire space that this kind of business is working within. Its the bleeding edge people, get your red blood cell count up because you might bleed a little more before its done.

This is correct, your original investment could have been in the range of $80, so 0.12BTC in hand that LRM has paid you is equivalent in the eyes of the US.

BKM
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March 10, 2014, 06:32:49 PM
 #3573

Many questions were posted last night.  Please allow time before my responses as I'm not going be sitting infront of the computer 24/7.  If you want something to actually get done that is.

I'm sorry but it took me about 15 minutes to read all the posts last night, and about 10 minutes while working to catch up this morning.

I am confused why this takes you 24/7 to accomplish, and what I think what we would all like to know is what the hell you are doing when you aren't posting here.

But how many hours were in between? People are expecting a response within 5 minutes of their post.

no we are expecting a complete picture when you drop a bombshell and for you to responsibly present information when you reduce the value of our investment to 0.001% of your previous valuation of bonds.

This too, whats currently on the website just pooped all over this investment. I put in 13 coins I expected 13 back, with the current proposition ill never see that happen.

correction: 0.01% of original value (forgot the percent contains two decimals, don't want to exaggerate)

Again, not defending LRM here but you have a paper loss until you dispose of your bonds. And, are you counting in BTC or USD? Counting in BTC losses and gains is a complete and utter fallacy when it comes to investing. It misses the point. Yes, you COULD have had more BTC IF you had done something different with it before. And BTC MIGHT have dropped to $1 in the meantime.

Come one people...... get a grip and deal with the reality of the circumstances at hand and not what MIGHT have been IF I only just.......[fill in your regrets here]
Endlessa
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March 10, 2014, 06:34:07 PM
 #3574

With the change to the original terms, If I do not agree, do I get my original 1 BTC investment back? Fair question, I think.

The very question implies a complete lack of understanding of the investment you have made. Your original 1 BTC investement, for accounting purposes, is converted to USD at the time it is was made. The tax system does not function under BTC - think of it as if you had bought Euros or Yen six months ago and then sold them today at a loss or a gain. Furthermore, the market is the place you go to sell your bonds (or whatever the hell they are actually supposed to be called) just like you would with any company where you wanted to sell your stake. There is no right of redemption in the "real world" of investments, nor should one be implied with any investment in the wild west of BTC land.  

I do not intend this reply as a defense of LRM or any other company in the world of BTC but rather as a comment on the seemingly basic and essential lack of understanding regarding accounting and business that seems to come through loud and clear when the shit hits the fan(s).

Also, while I took a pretty hard stance towards LRM in my initial reaction to this situation, I await further guidance from Zach, particularly in regards to the disposition of the incoming hardware, before a decision that this is bad or good. In fact, this may turn out very, very well not only for us but also for the entire space that this kind of business is working within. Its the bleeding edge people, get your red blood cell count up because you might bleed a little more before its done.

These is correct, your original investment could have been in the range of $80, so 0.12BTC in hand that LRM has paid you is equivalent in the eyes of the US.

this were tradable assets, so the payments are not relevant to the value of the asset but instead are a benefit of holding them.  

Also please point me to the place where it's been stated since the beginning that these contracts are malleable.
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March 10, 2014, 06:37:28 PM
 #3575


Again, not defending LRM here but you have a paper loss until you dispose of your bonds. And, are you counting in BTC or USD? Counting in BTC losses and gains is a complete and utter fallacy when it comes to investing. It misses the point. Yes, you COULD have had more BTC IF you had done something different with it before. And BTC MIGHT have dropped to $1 in the meantime.

Come one people...... get a grip and deal with the reality of the circumstances at hand and not what MIGHT have been IF I only just.......[fill in your regrets here]

actually, it wouldn't be an issue, except that this whole exercise is unnecessary.  This change is under the assumption there is no legal path forward.  Where as, FinCEN explicitly states in it's administrative ruling that dividends payed by mining groups through real non-voting shares are legal.  It would be the exact same thing we have now.  So why burn or futures to the ground?


Edit: it would require forming a corporation, but LRM could maintain all voting rights
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March 10, 2014, 06:38:32 PM
 #3576

As long as LRM issues the correct multiple of 100MH/s contracts for the 58,792 original variable rate
contracts based on the total purchased hash rate to date, I see no problem with him. He would be
acting in good faith.

We all took one main risk when purchasing these contracts. We all fundamentally believed that LRM
could mine more BTC than it cost for us to purchase the mining hardware. This belief was dynamic
and transient in nature. That is, there was a time value associated with each piece of hardware LRM
purchased. If LRM could purchase in bulk or get preferential delivery or get lucky with BTC pricing at
the moment, it could provide more BTC returned per BTC invested. That was the key to this whole
agreement.

The facts are that LRM (and just about every other mining company on earth), got steam rolled by
hardware manufacturers. This occurred because of late deliveries and prices that were too high per
gh/s. As unfortunate as that is, LRM cannot be blamed for that.

All we can really do is make sure that LRM took in X amount of BTC, converted it to Y amount of $,
and purchased Z amount of hash rate. We are entitled to Z amount of hash rate divided up 58,792
ways. That is it. If that "conversion engine" does not yield > 100% BTC out for each BTC in, then we
are S.O.L. If LRM does not give us X-->Y-->Z conversion fairly, then LRM needs to be held accountable
for that.

Please enlighten me if you feel this is overly simplistic.
Lab_Rat (OP)
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March 10, 2014, 06:38:42 PM
 #3577

With the change to the original terms, If I do not agree, do I get my original 1 BTC investment back? Fair question, I think.

The very question implies a complete lack of understanding of the investment you have made. Your original 1 BTC investement, for accounting purposes, is converted to USD at the time it is was made. The tax system does not function under BTC - think of it as if you had bought Euros or Yen six months ago and then sold them today at a loss or a gain. Furthermore, the market is the place you go to sell your bonds (or whatever the hell they are actually supposed to be called) just like you would with any company where you wanted to sell your stake. There is no right of redemption in the "real world" of investments, nor should one be implied with any investment in the wild west of BTC land.  

I do not intend this reply as a defense of LRM or any other company in the world of BTC but rather as a comment on the seemingly basic and essential lack of understanding regarding accounting and business that seems to come through loud and clear when the shit hits the fan(s).

Also, while I took a pretty hard stance towards LRM in my initial reaction to this situation, I await further guidance from Zach, particularly in regards to the disposition of the incoming hardware, before a decision that this is bad or good. In fact, this may turn out very, very well not only for us but also for the entire space that this kind of business is working within. Its the bleeding edge people, get your red blood cell count up because you might bleed a little more before its done.

This is correct, your original investment could have been in the range of $80, so 0.12BTC in hand that LRM has paid you is equivalent in the eyes of the US.

this were tradable assets, so the payments are not relevant to the value of the asset but instead are a benefit of holding them.  

Also please point me to the place where it's been stated since the beginning that these contracts are malleable.

"this were tradable assets, so the payments are not relevant to the value of the asset but instead are a benefit of holding them." makes no legal sense whatsoever.

"Also please point me to the place where it's been stated since the beginning that these contracts are malleable." would have been up on bitfunder the entire time the "asset" was listed.

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March 10, 2014, 06:42:07 PM
 #3578

The facts are that LRM (and just about every other mining company on earth), got steam rolled by
hardware manufacturers. This occurred because of late deliveries and prices that were too high per
gh/s. As unfortunate as that is, LRM cannot be blamed for that.

All we can really do is make sure that LRM took in X amount of BTC, converted it to Y amount of $,
and purchased Z amount of hash rate. We are entitled to Z amount of hash rate divided up 58,792
ways. That is it. If that "conversion engine" does not yield > 100% BTC out for each BTC in, then we
are S.O.L. If LRM does not give us X-->Y-->Z conversion fairly, then LRM needs to be held accountable
for that.

Please enlighten me if you feel this is overly simplistic.

This is way too true.  The only issue is that if I paid out all of Z, I would be in a lot of red....

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March 10, 2014, 06:43:51 PM
 #3579

no we are expecting a complete picture when you drop a bombshell and for you to responsibly present information

I'm working on doing so and all I have done is provide an immediate fix that does fit into the original contract promises, with the intent to find a way to benefit early contract purchasers as more hardware comes in.


This is easily the most pressing issue moving forward. Bond value today means nothing because there is no clear direction for the future of the mining operation.

If today and future bond holders are appropriately compensated for increase in hashrate accordingly, then I do not see why this change in structure is so nefarious.

I also feel it is extremely important for you to acknowledge that any decrease in overall hashing entitlement, relative to total mine hash rate, to bond holders directly increases what LRM rakes itself. Or more plainly, LRM rakes in proportionately more today than it did yesterday and no additional bonds have been sold. I do not think that this can move forward without this acknowledgement and a concerted effort to appropriately compensate bond holders, present and future, when the mine increases its hashing power. If there is no such provision, LRM should dissolve itself.
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March 10, 2014, 06:44:56 PM
 #3580



"this were tradable assets, so the payments are not relevant to the value of the asset but instead are a benefit of holding them." makes no legal sense whatsoever.

"Also please point me to the place where it's been stated since the beginning that these contracts are malleable." would have been up on bitfunder the entire time the "asset" was listed.

It made no sense that we could buy and sell these contracts and that value is separate from the dividends you paid? I buy a contract for .15 btc . . . receive payments for the duration then sell it to someone else for .15 (or whatever valuation is).  claiming that the dividends were paying off the value of the contract is not even remotely close to how this works.  There is no termination point of the contract and you have a lot of outstanding "bonds" that still haven't met fruition.


Everything you sold since bitfunder's demise is not under those terms, but under the ones on these forums.  It could be argued that these forums are the actual publicly identified terms, since they are were you perform your business and that sneaking things in other places is a deceptive practice.
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