Glurioram (OP)
Newbie
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Activity: 2
Merit: 0
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July 10, 2019, 12:24:12 AM |
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Thank you all for your replies! I’m not wanting to sell or trying to scam anyone I just want to know how much all is worth. Guess all in all I spent about $2K in all of those items years ago, from the replies all of it can go for about $30K in todays market? Been kind off the collectables market for some time that’s why I’m asking. Those 1 btc peeled coins I bought for $5 each, how much are they going for now? I’ll probably just leave them for my kids or keep them and sell in 30 years for my retirement money if I survive that long unless I get some out of this world offer for any of the items... don’t think that will happen.
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hybridsole
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July 10, 2019, 12:35:18 AM |
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I believe these all are owned by the OP due to the pictures and camera matching up. That said anyone should use escrow with brand new accounts.
You've done very well for yourself with these purchases over the years. People on the forum tend to build up reputation, so it's odd that we see a brand new account with years worth of memorabilia.
The premium in BTC terms has taken a huge hit on all of the loaded coins. Those 1 btc peeled brass Casascius coins can go anywhere from $100-500 depending on condition. Ebay has several for reference pricing.
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FFrankie
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July 10, 2019, 01:07:02 AM |
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The fact that the 25 BTC coin's holo is not completely destroyed (looks to be only peeled slightly) and yet it HAS been swept, to me, points to some solvent being used to try to compromise the coin without detection. This was performed at Defcon several years ago and it took all of 10 minutes. I am not trying to spread speculation, but please can someone answer how else this could happen? Whenever I've peeled a coin, it is completely destroyed. It looks nothing like the coin pictured. Compare to the other 2013 Cas Brass pictured - that one looks normal.
When I peel a coin I try to not destroy the hologram and only actually peel like 25% of it. I think most people here try to preserve the hologram when peeling so it's still got the hologram when they resell them
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TookDk
Legendary
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Activity: 1960
Merit: 1062
One coin to rule them all
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July 10, 2019, 11:46:36 AM |
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The fact that the 25 BTC coin's holo is not completely destroyed (looks to be only peeled slightly) and yet it HAS been swept, to me, points to some solvent being used to try to compromise the coin without detection. This was performed at Defcon several years ago and it took all of 10 minutes. I am not trying to spread speculation, but please can someone answer how else this could happen? Whenever I've peeled a coin, it is completely destroyed. It looks nothing like the coin pictured. Compare to the other 2013 Cas Brass pictured - that one looks normal.
The hack was far from perfect, you could see the places where the needle penetrated the holo with the naked eye. This is why I recommend to inspect the holo with a magnifier or microscope if you buy from a none trusted source. Afaik the lazer edged holo on the Cas 1 BTC silvers has never been hacked, mike did the lazer edging as a respond to defcon, I am surprised not more coin manufacturers have adopted this technique.
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Cryptography is one of the few things you can truly trust.
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krogothmanhattan
Cypher Hodl LLC
Legendary
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Activity: 2674
Merit: 3475
The Stone the masons rejected was the cornerstone.
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July 10, 2019, 11:51:48 AM |
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The fact that the 25 BTC coin's holo is not completely destroyed (looks to be only peeled slightly) and yet it HAS been swept, to me, points to some solvent being used to try to compromise the coin without detection. This was performed at Defcon several years ago and it took all of 10 minutes. I am not trying to spread speculation, but please can someone answer how else this could happen? Whenever I've peeled a coin, it is completely destroyed. It looks nothing like the coin pictured. Compare to the other 2013 Cas Brass pictured - that one looks normal.
When I peel a coin I try to not destroy the hologram and only actually peel like 25% of it. I think most people here try to preserve the hologram when peeling so it's still got the hologram when they resell them Yes agree...the hologram is an integral part of the coin and should be preserved as much as possible to be able to be sodl with the coin itself. I prefer a coin with the holo AND the private key with it than nothing but a coin.
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vizique
Legendary
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Activity: 2433
Merit: 1642
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July 10, 2019, 01:51:07 PM |
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I prefer a coin with the holo AND the private key with it than nothing but a coin. This pretty much nails a post peel coins desirability. The more of the original that is still available, the better. Coin, holo AND Priv Key. All part of the provenance of the coin. As we go forward, provenance of coins is going to become vital. Coins without it will sell for much less. Why? We have yet to see a true wave of determined knock offs appear. When they do, custody chains, PGP certs and anything that can provide quality provenance will be incredibly valuable to a coins resell value. We have already seen premiums getting mauled as a result of BTC's rise. They will get worse without a full/trustworthy history. This can be said for ANY loaded item. Viz
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Agrawas
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July 10, 2019, 04:01:48 PM |
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Correct, most coins can be peeled with the hologram at least 50% still attached. And certain coins, once you put the hologram back down on them, it is hard to tell that they were peeled. BTCC 1st hologram is like this
Wow, that is good and scary to know at the same time.. I gotta send all my coins to you for rechecking.. lol
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JUPITYR
Member
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Activity: 466
Merit: 74
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July 10, 2019, 06:11:29 PM |
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The fact that the 25 BTC coin's holo is not completely destroyed (looks to be only peeled slightly) and yet it HAS been swept, to me, points to some solvent being used to try to compromise the coin without detection. This was performed at Defcon several years ago and it took all of 10 minutes. I am not trying to spread speculation, but please can someone answer how else this could happen? Whenever I've peeled a coin, it is completely destroyed. It looks nothing like the coin pictured. Compare to the other 2013 Cas Brass pictured - that one looks normal.
The hack was far from perfect, you could see the places where the needle penetrated the holo with the naked eye. This is why I recommend to inspect the holo with a magnifier or microscope if you buy from a none trusted source. Afaik the lazer edged holo on the Cas 1 BTC silvers has never been hacked, mike did the lazer edging as a respond to defcon, I am surprised not more coin manufacturers have adopted this technique. Pretty sure the etched privkey can be seen under X-Ray without peeling.
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Hellot
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July 10, 2019, 06:15:01 PM |
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The fact that the 25 BTC coin's holo is not completely destroyed (looks to be only peeled slightly) and yet it HAS been swept, to me, points to some solvent being used to try to compromise the coin without detection. This was performed at Defcon several years ago and it took all of 10 minutes. I am not trying to spread speculation, but please can someone answer how else this could happen? Whenever I've peeled a coin, it is completely destroyed. It looks nothing like the coin pictured. Compare to the other 2013 Cas Brass pictured - that one looks normal.
The hack was far from perfect, you could see the places where the needle penetrated the holo with the naked eye. This is why I recommend to inspect the holo with a magnifier or microscope if you buy from a none trusted source. Afaik the lazer edged holo on the Cas 1 BTC silvers has never been hacked, mike did the lazer edging as a respond to defcon, I am surprised not more coin manufacturers have adopted this technique. Pretty sure the etched privkey can be seen under X-Ray without peeling. There are no etched keys on Casascius coins. They are talking about the melt ring around the edge of the hologram that is made using a laser.
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JUPITYR
Member
Offline
Activity: 466
Merit: 74
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July 10, 2019, 06:17:32 PM |
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The fact that the 25 BTC coin's holo is not completely destroyed (looks to be only peeled slightly) and yet it HAS been swept, to me, points to some solvent being used to try to compromise the coin without detection. This was performed at Defcon several years ago and it took all of 10 minutes. I am not trying to spread speculation, but please can someone answer how else this could happen? Whenever I've peeled a coin, it is completely destroyed. It looks nothing like the coin pictured. Compare to the other 2013 Cas Brass pictured - that one looks normal.
The hack was far from perfect, you could see the places where the needle penetrated the holo with the naked eye. This is why I recommend to inspect the holo with a magnifier or microscope if you buy from a none trusted source. Afaik the lazer edged holo on the Cas 1 BTC silvers has never been hacked, mike did the lazer edging as a respond to defcon, I am surprised not more coin manufacturers have adopted this technique. Pretty sure the etched privkey can be seen under X-Ray without peeling. There are no etched keys on Casascius coins. They are talking about the melt ring around the edge of the hologram that is made using a laser. Ah, gotcha.
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FFrankie
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July 10, 2019, 08:53:10 PM |
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The fact that the 25 BTC coin's holo is not completely destroyed (looks to be only peeled slightly) and yet it HAS been swept, to me, points to some solvent being used to try to compromise the coin without detection. This was performed at Defcon several years ago and it took all of 10 minutes. I am not trying to spread speculation, but please can someone answer how else this could happen? Whenever I've peeled a coin, it is completely destroyed. It looks nothing like the coin pictured. Compare to the other 2013 Cas Brass pictured - that one looks normal.
The hack was far from perfect, you could see the places where the needle penetrated the holo with the naked eye. This is why I recommend to inspect the holo with a magnifier or microscope if you buy from a none trusted source. Afaik the lazer edged holo on the Cas 1 BTC silvers has never been hacked, mike did the lazer edging as a respond to defcon, I am surprised not more coin manufacturers have adopted this technique. Pretty sure the etched privkey can be seen under X-Ray without peeling. If that is true than all nastycoins should be considered compromised, I wonder if OGnasty took any steps to prevent this. The guy that made those wallets that were almost impossible to destroy, and bip38 encrypted xrayed his and the private key couldnt be read, They had a really weird name, and if someone could guessed the inspiration of the name they got one free. Can anyone recall?
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Bluewaffle
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July 10, 2019, 10:31:25 PM |
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The fact that the 25 BTC coin's holo is not completely destroyed (looks to be only peeled slightly) and yet it HAS been swept, to me, points to some solvent being used to try to compromise the coin without detection. This was performed at Defcon several years ago and it took all of 10 minutes. I am not trying to spread speculation, but please can someone answer how else this could happen? Whenever I've peeled a coin, it is completely destroyed. It looks nothing like the coin pictured. Compare to the other 2013 Cas Brass pictured - that one looks normal.
The hack was far from perfect, you could see the places where the needle penetrated the holo with the naked eye. This is why I recommend to inspect the holo with a magnifier or microscope if you buy from a none trusted source. Afaik the lazer edged holo on the Cas 1 BTC silvers has never been hacked, mike did the lazer edging as a respond to defcon, I am surprised not more coin manufacturers have adopted this technique. Pretty sure the etched privkey can be seen under X-Ray without peeling. There are no etched keys on Casascius coins. They are talking about the melt ring around the edge of the hologram that is made using a laser. Does anyone have a good picture of a cas coin that has the laser etched edged vs one that has been peeled and the edge has been destroyed just curious to see how they look as ive never even held a real cassascius coin
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