Falkvinge
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Activity: 31
Merit: 0
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February 14, 2014, 01:03:16 AM |
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I got this too some hour back... to my phone of all places where it's hard not to react to the coin-arrival sound. Gotta give them credit for the creativity of spamming with vanity addresses, though. Took me a while to find this thread. https://i.imgur.com/GrfQIOQ.jpg
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Automatic
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February 14, 2014, 01:08:02 AM |
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I got this too some hour back... to my phone of all places where it's hard not to react to the coin-arrival sound. Gotta give them credit for the creativity of spamming with vanity addresses, though. Took me a while to find this thread. What the hell did you use to write that text? It looks so sexy.
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Please ask for a signed message from my on-site Bitcoin address (Check my profile) before doing any offsite trades with me.
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Falkvinge
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Activity: 31
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February 14, 2014, 01:14:20 AM |
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What the hell did you use to write that text? It looks so sexy. It's a Galaxy Note phone, with the built-in pen. One thing it really rocks at is annotating when weird stuff happens, like now. You take out the pen, write what you like on the screen image you're commenting on, and hit "send" in whatever way you like - here, save to imgur. Much quicker than anything else I've used for quick WTF notes that need to be passed along. So it's my handwriting.
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Automatic
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February 14, 2014, 01:19:28 AM |
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What the hell did you use to write that text? It looks so sexy. -boringstuff- So it's my handwriting. Well then, I like your handwriting.
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Please ask for a signed message from my on-site Bitcoin address (Check my profile) before doing any offsite trades with me.
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eafdeafd
Member
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Activity: 84
Merit: 10
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February 14, 2014, 01:50:37 AM |
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VolanicEruptor (OP)
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February 14, 2014, 05:46:34 AM |
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What the hell did you use to write that text? It looks so sexy. -boringstuff- So it's my handwriting. Well then, I like your handwriting. I agree, that is one hell of a hand job.. i mean...
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VolanicEruptor (OP)
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February 14, 2014, 05:49:11 AM |
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According to the last 10 news posts at blockchain.info, there is a lot more to it than a penny in someones mailbox.. it seems to be a little more complicated than that
You are saying that you believe that send you a satoshi is the same thing as the ongoing DDOS attack? There is a real attack going on which has absolutely nothing with this thread. You are right to some extent but still .. if you receive 1000 pennies, instead of 1, your mailbox is getting problems; if you run a business then such an extremely clogged mailbox could cause serious damage even if you manage to clean them out after awhile. If such spamming is used in a serious and malicious way, it would not really be good for BTC would it? What consumer would want to use a wallet with hundreds of such transactions in it? Spam mail does not cause damage to my email software but clogs it up nevertheless. I am afraid that this is the beginning of something awful. We witness the birth of crypto spamming. That started a long time ago , one of the reasons the minimal transaction fee was imposed. But will blockchain.info show the public note while it's still unconfirmed? If it does, then this is a very successful spamming technique for advertising penis growth pills.
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dyask
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February 14, 2014, 05:53:07 AM |
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According to the last 10 news posts at blockchain.info, there is a lot more to it than a penny in someones mailbox.. it seems to be a little more complicated than that
You are saying that you believe that send you a satoshi is the same thing as the ongoing DDOS attack? There is a real attack going on which has absolutely nothing with this thread. You are right to some extent but still .. if you receive 1000 pennies, instead of 1, your mailbox is getting problems; if you run a business then such an extremely clogged mailbox could cause serious damage even if you manage to clean them out after awhile. If such spamming is used in a serious and malicious way, it would not really be good for BTC would it? What consumer would want to use a wallet with hundreds of such transactions in it? Spam mail does not cause damage to my email software but clogs it up nevertheless. I am afraid that this is the beginning of something awful. We witness the birth of crypto spamming. That started a long time ago , one of the reasons the minimal transaction fee was imposed. But will blockchain.info show the public note while it's still unconfirmed? If it does, then this is a very successful spamming technique for advertising penis growth pills. If someone is using a vanity address they should always have to pay the transaction fee. That would stop the spam!
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VolanicEruptor (OP)
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February 14, 2014, 06:01:14 AM |
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According to the last 10 news posts at blockchain.info, there is a lot more to it than a penny in someones mailbox.. it seems to be a little more complicated than that
You are saying that you believe that send you a satoshi is the same thing as the ongoing DDOS attack? There is a real attack going on which has absolutely nothing with this thread. You are right to some extent but still .. if you receive 1000 pennies, instead of 1, your mailbox is getting problems; if you run a business then such an extremely clogged mailbox could cause serious damage even if you manage to clean them out after awhile. If such spamming is used in a serious and malicious way, it would not really be good for BTC would it? What consumer would want to use a wallet with hundreds of such transactions in it? Spam mail does not cause damage to my email software but clogs it up nevertheless. I am afraid that this is the beginning of something awful. We witness the birth of crypto spamming. That started a long time ago , one of the reasons the minimal transaction fee was imposed. But will blockchain.info show the public note while it's still unconfirmed? If it does, then this is a very successful spamming technique for advertising penis growth pills. If someone is using a vanity address they should always have to pay the transaction fee. That would stop the spam! There is no way of detecting if it's a vanity address.
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R2D221
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February 14, 2014, 06:06:07 AM |
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If someone is using a vanity address they should always have to pay the transaction fee. That would stop the spam!
I thought people were already required to always pay the transaction fee.
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An economy based on endless growth is unsustainable.
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cAPSLOCK
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3752
Merit: 5142
Whimsical Pants
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February 14, 2014, 06:13:41 AM |
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Setting a fee threshold for low transactions might work. It would have to be the same as the minimum at least.
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Sonny
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February 14, 2014, 06:19:18 AM |
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What the hell did you use to write that text? It looks so sexy. -boringstuff- So it's my handwriting. Well then, I like your handwriting. I agree, that is one hell of a hand job.. i mean... hm....that sounds awesome lol The handwriting is really very cool
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yatsey87
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February 14, 2014, 01:12:42 PM |
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If someone is using a vanity address they should always have to pay the transaction fee. That would stop the spam!
I thought people were already required to always pay the transaction fee. nope, transactions take ages without one though.
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hilariousandco
Global Moderator
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Merit: 2654
Join the world-leading crypto sportsbook NOW!
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February 14, 2014, 01:14:24 PM |
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According to the last 10 news posts at blockchain.info, there is a lot more to it than a penny in someones mailbox.. it seems to be a little more complicated than that
You are saying that you believe that send you a satoshi is the same thing as the ongoing DDOS attack? There is a real attack going on which has absolutely nothing with this thread. You are right to some extent but still .. if you receive 1000 pennies, instead of 1, your mailbox is getting problems; if you run a business then such an extremely clogged mailbox could cause serious damage even if you manage to clean them out after awhile. If such spamming is used in a serious and malicious way, it would not really be good for BTC would it? What consumer would want to use a wallet with hundreds of such transactions in it? Spam mail does not cause damage to my email software but clogs it up nevertheless. I am afraid that this is the beginning of something awful. We witness the birth of crypto spamming. That started a long time ago , one of the reasons the minimal transaction fee was imposed. But will blockchain.info show the public note while it's still unconfirmed? If it does, then this is a very successful spamming technique for advertising penis growth pills. If someone is using a vanity address they should always have to pay the transaction fee. That would stop the spam! It wouldn't. They'd just use a normal one.
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stompix
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2968
Merit: 6466
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February 14, 2014, 01:33:19 PM |
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According to the last 10 news posts at blockchain.info, there is a lot more to it than a penny in someones mailbox.. it seems to be a little more complicated than that
You are saying that you believe that send you a satoshi is the same thing as the ongoing DDOS attack? There is a real attack going on which has absolutely nothing with this thread. You are right to some extent but still .. if you receive 1000 pennies, instead of 1, your mailbox is getting problems; if you run a business then such an extremely clogged mailbox could cause serious damage even if you manage to clean them out after awhile. If such spamming is used in a serious and malicious way, it would not really be good for BTC would it? What consumer would want to use a wallet with hundreds of such transactions in it? Spam mail does not cause damage to my email software but clogs it up nevertheless. I am afraid that this is the beginning of something awful. We witness the birth of crypto spamming. That started a long time ago , one of the reasons the minimal transaction fee was imposed. But will blockchain.info show the public note while it's still unconfirmed? If it does, then this is a very successful spamming technique for advertising penis growth pills. If someone is using a vanity address they should always have to pay the transaction fee. That would stop the spam! There is no way of detecting if it's a vanity address. Yeah , good luck finding out if it's a vanity address or not. Besides , they could easily switch to a random one. The spam will stop when blockchain.info won't be showing those messages anymore.
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dyask
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February 14, 2014, 01:38:47 PM |
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According to the last 10 news posts at blockchain.info, there is a lot more to it than a penny in someones mailbox.. it seems to be a little more complicated than that
You are saying that you believe that send you a satoshi is the same thing as the ongoing DDOS attack? There is a real attack going on which has absolutely nothing with this thread. You are right to some extent but still .. if you receive 1000 pennies, instead of 1, your mailbox is getting problems; if you run a business then such an extremely clogged mailbox could cause serious damage even if you manage to clean them out after awhile. If such spamming is used in a serious and malicious way, it would not really be good for BTC would it? What consumer would want to use a wallet with hundreds of such transactions in it? Spam mail does not cause damage to my email software but clogs it up nevertheless. I am afraid that this is the beginning of something awful. We witness the birth of crypto spamming. That started a long time ago , one of the reasons the minimal transaction fee was imposed. But will blockchain.info show the public note while it's still unconfirmed? If it does, then this is a very successful spamming technique for advertising penis growth pills. If someone is using a vanity address they should always have to pay the transaction fee. That would stop the spam! There is no way of detecting if it's a vanity address. Yeah , good luck finding out if it's a vanity address or not. Besides , they could easily switch to a random one. The spam will stop when blockchain.info won't be showing those messages anymore. Now that is a great idea.
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kodiak1120
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February 14, 2014, 02:41:06 PM |
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I saw on Reddit, someone linked a post from this forum where a user named "EnjoyThis" was asking about creating vanity addresses: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=301068.100Also, can someone explain to me: (1) why are these payments not getting confirmed; and (2) is this related to the malleability DDOS attack? They seem related since both involve unconfirmed transactions. Thanks.
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hilariousandco
Global Moderator
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Merit: 2654
Join the world-leading crypto sportsbook NOW!
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February 14, 2014, 02:43:37 PM |
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I think they're clutching at straws with the link there.
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kodiak1120
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February 14, 2014, 02:55:35 PM |
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The guy was asking for help creating a vanity address using "1Enjoy." That's the same as the spamming address.
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Lauda
Legendary
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Activity: 2674
Merit: 2965
Terminated.
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February 14, 2014, 02:57:46 PM |
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Someone is having some fun with everyone.
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"The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks" 😼 Bitcoin Core ( onion)
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