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Author Topic: Calling all Bitcoiners: SPEAK OUT against CIRCLE!  (Read 6751 times)
inBitweTrust
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May 22, 2014, 07:53:46 PM
Last edit: May 22, 2014, 08:06:18 PM by inBitweTrust
 #121

All capitalist enterprises are pyramid schemes, and all corporations are state-sponsored. In my country (USA), the business elite and the political elite are the SAME PEOPLE.


I have noticed there is alot of misunderstanding in the definition of the word capitalism when Anarcho-Caps speak with Anarcho-Communists. Anarcho-Communists typically rail against chrony-capatalism,  kleptocracy, and Fascism. This is what Anarcho-caps are against as well. We don't support corporations as they exist in the marketplace today because of their unfair legal protections granted by the state.

What I don't understand is how you can be a Bitcoin supporter and against pure Capitalism as commonly defined?

"Capitalism is an economic system in which trade, industry, and the means of production are controlled by private owners with the goal of making profits in a market economy."

Bitcoins are assets that are privately owned and traded freely in a market economy. The Bitcoin framework is designed where systems, states, and communities cannot easily interfere with the free distribution of these assets as wages or property. There are no restrictions of individuals accumulating these assets either as profit in the Bitcoin architecture.

If you are against wages and private ownership of property aren't you advocating for a much different cryto-currency that restricts the private ownership and control of these assets? Possibly, one that equally distributes x-tokens equally and restricts unequal accumulation of those crypto-tokens?


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May 22, 2014, 08:03:51 PM
 #122

All capitalist enterprises are pyramid schemes, and all corporations are state-sponsored. In my country (USA), the business elite and the political elite are the SAME PEOPLE.


I have noticed there is alot of misunderstanding in the definition of the word capitalism when Anarcho-Caps speak with Anarcho-Communists. Anarcho-Communists typically rail against chrony-capatalism,  kleptocracy, and Fascism. This is what Anarcho-caps are against as well. We don't support corporations as they exist in the marketplace today because of their unfair legal protections granted by the state.


What I don't understand is how you can be a Bitcoin supporter and against pure Capitalism as commonly defined?

"Capitalism is an economic system in which trade, industry, and the means of production are controlled by private owners with the goal of making profits in a market economy."

Bitcoins are assets that are privately owned and traded freely in a market economy. The Bitcoin framework is deigned where systems, states, and communities cannot easily interfere with the free distribution of these assets as wages or property. There are no restrictions of individuals accumulating these assets either as profit in the Bitcoin architecture.

If you are against wages and private ownership of property aren't you advocating for a much different cryto-currency that restricts the private ownership and control of these assets? Possibly, one that equally distributes x-tokens equally and restricts unequal accumulation of those crypto-tokens?



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May 22, 2014, 08:31:32 PM
 #123

Anyone half way smart is going to say "what's the point of this? I don't get any bitcoin at all". You get to spend fiat money through bitcoin retailers, but with the bitcoin exchange rate affecting your fiat balance. Even someone dumb enough to sign up will end up thinking "huh?"

I see your point, but I was thinking that spending bitcoins at retailers is secondary to using bitcoins as a store of value.

What seems huge to me is the ability for new adopters to instantly purchase with their credit cards.  It looks like they are running real-time credit checks, and allowing purchases based on credit ratings (although I still don't understand how they are getting around the identity theft problem).  

If people can sign up for an account quickly, get $10 of BTC for free, and then purchase bitcoins with credit card, I think this could have a significant effect on bitcoin demand should a new rally emerge.  Think about it:

Friend: "Hey, how are those bitcoins things doing lately?  Are they still around?"

Bitcoiner: "Yes, in fact the currency just eclipsed its previous all-time high of $1262 from November."

Friend: "Oh really?  So it's still growing, hey?  Do you think it will shoot up like it did last time?"

Bitcoiner: "It could happen."

Friend: "How do I buy them?  Maybe just $100 in case it goes up.  And I don't want my bitcoins to get hacked and my computer is full of viruses."

Bitcoiner: "The easiest way to get started is with Circle.  You can buy them now with your credit card and Circle will hold them for you.  When you learn more about proper bitcoin security, you can manage them yourself if you choose so that you retain full control of your funds."


This seems like a good thing for bitcoin.  


I won't say for certain but I'm reasonably certain that Circle isn't doing background or credit checks. I think they're most logically doing what any other service does and checking to make sure you actually have the funds you're trying to transfer, similar to the way PayPal works, or any other POS transaction with a debit/credit card.

The credit check would be an enormous brick wall for the vast majority of debt ridden public population who would instantly and permanently recoil at the very idea Circle is gonna pull a credit check. And moreso for background checks or all that.

It read to me that the check was to verify you actually have the funds - else what would happen easily is someone would transfer huge amounts, move it to a wallet off Circle, the card would bounce and it'd be mass chaos.

You say "anti government" like that's a bad thing...

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May 22, 2014, 08:38:14 PM
Last edit: May 22, 2014, 09:00:29 PM by serenitys
 #124

Circle says they don't care about profitability. No deposit or withdrawal fees, no storage fees, no transaction fees AND insurance.

Nice business model - everything is free.  Where does the money come from?  Big VC firms like Andreesen Horowitz.  

All well and good, but what happens when their $26 million in VC funding runs out?  What happens if they can't score another round of funding?  What happens when they start dipping into your cold storage wallet just to keep the operations afloat?

Sure, Circle sounds like a panacea for Bitcoin newbies. Free, easy to use, safe.  It might be easy to use, but you have to sacrifice your financial privacy.  And it won't be free forever or the company will go out of business. And SAFE?  You've got to be kidding me.

Look, just because a company is funded with millions of dollars, incorporated and regulated doesn't mean ANYTHING.

MtGox, BitInstant, BitFloor ... seriously, the list is endless.  The only truly SAFE Bitcoin is that which is held offline in your own personal wallet, certainly NOT on a big exchange like CoinBase or Circle.

Bitcoiners really need to smarten up and stop trusting these mega-companies with their money.


Oh baloney.

Just because YOU don't know how they're financing it is in no measure whatsoever an indicator THEY don't know how they're financing it. Clearly they have a model that convinced venture capitalists to invest millions of fiat in a totally free product for the masses.

You sound like your head is firmly up your ass - which is why you are unable to connect the dots or understand what's shaping up here.

No offense. But hey, if we're taking the time to read your opinions then we're perfectly free to convey our own...

You say "anti government" like that's a bad thing...

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May 22, 2014, 09:25:03 PM
 #125

Circle says they don't care about profitability. No deposit or withdrawal fees, no storage fees, no transaction fees AND insurance.

Nice business model - everything is free.  Where does the money come from?  Big VC firms like Andreesen Horowitz. 

All well and good, but what happens when their $26 million in VC funding runs out?  What happens if they can't score another round of funding?  What happens when they start dipping into your cold storage wallet just to keep the operations afloat?

Sure, Circle sounds like a panacea for Bitcoin newbies. Free, easy to use, safe.  It might be easy to use, but you have to sacrifice your financial privacy.  And it won't be free forever or the company will go out of business. And SAFE?  You've got to be kidding me.

Look, just because a company is funded with millions of dollars, incorporated and regulated doesn't mean ANYTHING.

MtGox, BitInstant, BitFloor ... seriously, the list is endless.  The only truly SAFE Bitcoin is that which is held offline in your own personal wallet, certainly NOT on a big exchange like CoinBase or Circle.

Bitcoiners really need to smarten up and stop trusting these mega-companies with their money.


Oh baloney.

Just because YOU don't know how they're financing it is in no measure whatsoever an indicator THEY don't know how they're financing it. Clearly they have a model that convinced venture capitalists to invest millions of fiat in a totally free product for the masses.

You sound like your head is firmly up your ass - which is why you are unable to connect the dots or understand what's shaping up here.

No offense. But hey, if we're taking the time to read your opinions then we're perfectly free to convey our own...

I suspect the money isn't in individual banking anyway for them. THey set themselves up as some sort of private SWIFT network and the real money is dealing with corporations and moving money in mass around the world. Signing up small investors is just something to grease the wheels. THey have big goals, mom and pop on bitcoin is just peanuts.

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May 22, 2014, 10:00:00 PM
 #126

Just as with everything in the free market, the consumers will either choose to use this or not if its shoddy.
Its on its own organization.  No one is forced to join and do business with them. 
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May 23, 2014, 01:11:39 AM
 #127

We don't support corporations as they exist in the marketplace today because of their unfair legal protections granted by the state.

Without the state, you don't have contracts, and, until about 2009-2010, I assumed no money for the price system to work either.

Quote
"Capitalism is an economic system in which trade, industry, and the means of production are controlled by private owners with the goal of making profits in a market economy."

Bitcoins are assets that are privately owned and traded freely in a market economy. The Bitcoin framework is designed where systems, states, and communities cannot easily interfere with the free distribution of these assets as wages or property. There are no restrictions of individuals accumulating these assets either as profit in the Bitcoin architecture.

If you are against wages and private ownership of property aren't you advocating for a much different cryto-currency that restricts the private ownership and control of these assets? Possibly, one that equally distributes x-tokens equally and restricts unequal accumulation of those crypto-tokens?

First, collective ownership of the means of production does not imply a total restriction on private property.

Second, such a "communist" crypto-currency would be essentially impossible to set up in a trust-free manner. Information about the real world requires trusted sources of information. This is why I am not optimistic automated decentralized exchanges will become a reality.

Bitcoin essentially ends usury (by being deflationary in nature). If any die-hard anarcho-communists are worried about wealth accumulation, Freicoin Deserves a look

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inBitweTrust
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May 23, 2014, 05:53:01 AM
Last edit: May 23, 2014, 06:11:30 AM by inBitweTrust
 #128

Without the state, you don't have contracts, and, until about 2009-2010, I assumed no money for the price system to work either.

I don't understand how the state is in any way required for contracts between two or more individuals. Bitcoin itself shows that you can have a stateless contract system that even goes so far as removing counter-party risk and regulate itself in a trust-less manner.


First, collective ownership of the means of production does not imply a total restriction on private property.

Correct, there are many degrees of different political philosophies all will different definitions of what is allowed as private property ownership. Some collectives allow for some personal items under a certain value to be owned.


Second, such a "communist" crypto-currency would be essentially impossible to set up in a trust-free manner.

Agreed.

What was being discussed by Beliathon I believe is a form of anarcho-socialism/communism called parecon which uses participatory decision making to make economic decisions instead of the the free market and profits as signals to base economic decisions as bitcoin does. Participatory economics forces decentralized common ownership of means of production with voting and consensus making. Bitcoin does allow for some consensus voting with the direction of the code, but it also has some innate capitalist tendencies where business owners who invest labor and capital can accumulate a greater miner share and / or a larger bitcoin savings unlike what parecon proposes.

Parecon does speak about hypothetical electronic credits but these are attached to individual real identities and cannot be transferred or stolen and any other form of money would be discouraged which is quite a different arrangement than how Bitcoin is designed.

Parecon is dependent upon monitoring and comparing consumption in detail where there is little individual privacy unlike the pseudo-anonymity of bitcoin where individuals are free to participate outside the careful scrutiny of others.

The economic calculation problem is one of parecon's greatest weaknesses. Bitcoin communicates economic needs directly and immediately from many data points, while parecon depends upon a certain degree of policy planning to determine plans and prices. While this is better than central planning, there are serious concerns at the accuracy and fluidity of localized planning as opposed to having a capitalist market setting prices to inform business's inherent efficiencies or a lack thereof.

Lastly, there are serious concerns about coercion being used against dissenting individuals in many consensus building frameworks where the will of the majority is imposed upon the liberty of the minority. With bitcoin one can fork the blockchain and participate or not at any moment unlike with a required consensus planning meeting.

These differences are what confuse me as to how does one propagandize parecon and bitcoin in the same breath?
How does one square this circle?


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June 14, 2014, 06:31:09 PM
 #129

Just as with everything in the free market, the consumers will either choose to use this or not if its shoddy.
Its on its own organization.  No one is forced to join and do business with them. 


Circle is a way that will get the masses to start using bitcoin.

Circle does centralize bitcoin but it does not create a central authority.

If circle is successful then others will create competing services that are similar and will further innovate
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June 15, 2014, 01:47:50 AM
 #130

What is wrong with Circle to my knowledge they are just a payment processor for smartphones
Insert converter and send
Simply put they are a service not anything more or less and help with merchant adoption

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June 15, 2014, 02:45:27 AM
 #131

Circle has to be the worst idea in Bitcoin history; a Bitcoin central bank to centralize a decentralized cryptocurrency!  Next thing we know, there will be a Bitcoin Federal Reserve, Bitcoin Fractional Reserve Banking and, of course, Bitcoin INFLATION!

Anyone who supports the idea of DECENTRALIZED CRYPTOCURRENCY needs to IMMEDIATELY speak out against circle and its corrupt CEO Jeremy Allaire.  This is a massive ponzi scheme just waiting to happen.  They are so desperate to attract Bitcoiners that they are giving away a free $10 in Bitcoin just to get you ID-verified on their system.

This is a travesty and I am just dumbfounded that such a company could even get off the ground.  Bitcoiners need to speak out on the forums, blogs, magazines, commenting on articles - SPREAD THE WORD.

This company 'Circle' is gearing up for the biggest ponzi scheme that Bitcoin has ever known.  And if these types of centralized Bitcoin banks are allowed to succeed, it could very well spell the end of Bitcoin and a mass exodus towards other, less commercially-corrupted cryptocurrencies. 

Michael Moriarty

DO NOT DO THIS

Let me give you a lay down of what will happen,

First remember the big bankers, like barclays, JP Morgan Finance, and many many others hate this currency, do you know why, because in order for them to play they must pay, pure and simple, and these guys feel anything worth their investment should be free to join, and expensive for you for them to destroy. they have loads of cash and gold to manipulate any and every other market that is "CONTROLLED", "CENTRALIZED" and "REGULATED" you know who controls and regulates the common currencies, thats right places like Barclays, JP Morgan,  Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Bank of Nova Scotia and a few others. These guys manipulate absolutely anything that is "federally regulated" because they are the federal government. Your presidents, your congressman, those are just pawns on the chessboard of the big banks competiting with each other.

the second you centralize and allow federal regulations on this currency is the same dayb you allow places like JP MOrgan, and barclays bank to step in the door and freely regulate it the way they regulate everything else in the real world.

I say watch the big bankers, watch real gold and silver, and watch how things in those industries are defying all sense of logic, the watch as barclays and JP Morgans finances go thru the roofs aas they collude, and manipulate the markets, and banks like JP MOrgan go 3 yearswithout 1 lost trade in gold, That is impossible, but they do it, how because they know how they will move the market and bid on trades theyb know will bring them in fountains of cash on a daily basis. 4.3 trillion dollars are made daily on the forex market, and 4.29999999999 of those dollars goes to the already rich bankers of barclays and JP Morgan.

Let them destroy their own currency and come begging at the doortep of us to let them in, let them fail and destroy everything they have and be broke, dont let them in willingly to destroy us to. they do enough damage in world currencies, let them sleep in the bed they made for themselves, and beg us to bail them out.

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June 15, 2014, 02:48:38 AM
 #132

I don't have a problem with it.  A lot of people (most actually) aren't technically adept enough to keep their own bitcoins safe.  So this might not be a bad alternative for them.
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June 15, 2014, 03:14:30 AM
 #133

What is wrong with Circle to my knowledge they are just a payment processor for smartphones
Insert converter and send
Simply put they are a service not anything more or less and help with merchant adoption

Some people do not like the fact that Circle would act like a "bank" in that users would send coins to their account and then circle would encourage users to send money to other circle users in an off blochchain fashion.

As of now Circle does not plan on having any fees and to my knowledge do not plan on lending your coins that you deposit (operating on a fractional reserve)
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June 15, 2014, 03:41:34 AM
 #134

Businesses in this niche are inevitable -- I think that average joe type people will want trustworthy entities to hold their bitcoins and keep them safe. Is it ideal? No, and maybe with time we can move beyond that. But I think Circle and the like will bridge the gap to some extent.

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June 15, 2014, 04:10:21 AM
 #135

How is this different than coinbase.com?

I use coinbase to buy and sell coins with no issues. I can transfer my BTC to my offline wallet if I don't trust them.

I just don't see how Circle centralizes any coin when they too are dependent on the BTC network that they don't control.  Huh
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June 15, 2014, 04:13:27 AM
 #136

Who is a 'trustworthy entity' ? CIRCLE?

Right ... just like MtGox was trustworthy up until Karpeles ran off with everyone's coin.

You want a TRUSTWORTHY ENTITY?  Try an exchange or wallet service using TRUSTLESS IMPLEMENTATION such as multisig.

In fact, my whole network is moving to trustless wallets in the very near future .. I will not have access to anyone's private keys and therefore even the site owner would not be able to steal user funds.  If my grandmother was dying of cancer I couldn't steal your coins ..

Every exchange and wallet service should be moving RAPIDLY to implement trustless architecture.  No one should EVER trust their coins to a service like Circle, which could simply disappear.  

Here are some possible scenarios where you could lose ALL YOUR COINS with Circle:

A. The US government decides it doesn't like Bitcoin and bans it
B. Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire decides he wants that SuperYacht and runs off with the BTC (Not so far-fetched.  Remember Chris Mallick of ePassporte? He stole millions of dollars, including $50,000 of MY MONEY, to fund his silly porn movie)
C. A Circle ROGUE EMPLOYEE steals the BTC
D. A hacker steals the BTC
E. Circle decides to cancel your account because of onerous verification requirements

Who knows what other horror scenario could result in the loss of millions of dollars worth of Bitcoin through Circle.

Circle might be good for Bitcoin temporarily as it brings the clueless masses into the game. Fine and dandy. But what happens when it turns into a massive ponzi scam like MtGox? Do we really need another Bitcoin exchange disaster??

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June 15, 2014, 04:18:05 AM
 #137

What is wrong with Circle to my knowledge they are just a payment processor for smartphones
Insert converter and send
Simply put they are a service not anything more or less and help with merchant adoption

Some people do not like the fact that Circle would act like a "bank" in that users would send coins to their account and then circle would encourage users to send money to other circle users in an off blochchain fashion.

As of now Circle does not plan on having any fees and to my knowledge do not plan on lending your coins that you deposit (operating on a fractional reserve)

I see thanks for clarifying that in that case as long as they do not run a fractional reserve with the Bitcoins and have the capital and fiat to cover the ones they hold in their possession there should be no problem.

That said I guess a reserve if they somehow do get hacked might be needed, it has a lot of capital as a company so that shouldn't be a problem
The problems would occur if they declare bankruptcy with their fiat end.

For me circle makes it possible for a few people who don't get Bitcoin to use it as well and they take a niche market and help to push it further into mainstream.

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ShakyhandsBTCer
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June 15, 2014, 08:32:33 PM
 #138

What is wrong with Circle to my knowledge they are just a payment processor for smartphones
Insert converter and send
Simply put they are a service not anything more or less and help with merchant adoption

Some people do not like the fact that Circle would act like a "bank" in that users would send coins to their account and then circle would encourage users to send money to other circle users in an off blochchain fashion.

As of now Circle does not plan on having any fees and to my knowledge do not plan on lending your coins that you deposit (operating on a fractional reserve)

I see thanks for clarifying that in that case as long as they do not run a fractional reserve with the Bitcoins and have the capital and fiat to cover the ones they hold in their possession there should be no problem.

That said I guess a reserve if they somehow do get hacked might be needed, it has a lot of capital as a company so that shouldn't be a problem
The problems would occur if they declare bankruptcy with their fiat end.

For me circle makes it possible for a few people who don't get Bitcoin to use it as well and they take a niche market and help to push it further into mainstream.

Yes circle is something that would likely be very good for the less technically inclined.

One major concern that I have is the fact that it would a possible central point of failure where something could either go wrong or the site could get hacked
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June 15, 2014, 09:42:34 PM
 #139

Circle has to be the worst idea in Bitcoin history; a Bitcoin central bank to centralize a decentralized cryptocurrency!  Next thing we know, there will be a Bitcoin Federal Reserve, Bitcoin Fractional Reserve Banking and, of course, Bitcoin INFLATION!

Anyone who supports the idea of DECENTRALIZED CRYPTOCURRENCY needs to IMMEDIATELY speak out against circle and its corrupt CEO Jeremy Allaire.  This is a massive ponzi scheme just waiting to happen.  They are so desperate to attract Bitcoiners that they are giving away a free $10 in Bitcoin just to get you ID-verified on their system.

This is a travesty and I am just dumbfounded that such a company could even get off the ground.  Bitcoiners need to speak out on the forums, blogs, magazines, commenting on articles - SPREAD THE WORD.

This company 'Circle' is gearing up for the biggest ponzi scheme that Bitcoin has ever known.  And if these types of centralized Bitcoin banks are allowed to succeed, it could very well spell the end of Bitcoin and a mass exodus towards other, less commercially-corrupted cryptocurrencies. 

Michael Moriarty

DO NOT DO THIS

Let me give you a lay down of what will happen,

First remember the big bankers, like barclays, JP Morgan Finance, and many many others hate this currency, do you know why, because in order for them to play they must pay, pure and simple, and these guys feel anything worth their investment should be free to join, and expensive for you for them to destroy. they have loads of cash and gold to manipulate any and every other market that is "CONTROLLED", "CENTRALIZED" and "REGULATED" you know who controls and regulates the common currencies, thats right places like Barclays, JP Morgan,  Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Bank of Nova Scotia and a few others. These guys manipulate absolutely anything that is "federally regulated" because they are the federal government. Your presidents, your congressman, those are just pawns on the chessboard of the big banks competiting with each other.

the second you centralize and allow federal regulations on this currency is the same dayb you allow places like JP MOrgan, and barclays bank to step in the door and freely regulate it the way they regulate everything else in the real world.

I say watch the big bankers, watch real gold and silver, and watch how things in those industries are defying all sense of logic, the watch as barclays and JP Morgans finances go thru the roofs aas they collude, and manipulate the markets, and banks like JP MOrgan go 3 yearswithout 1 lost trade in gold, That is impossible, but they do it, how because they know how they will move the market and bid on trades theyb know will bring them in fountains of cash on a daily basis. 4.3 trillion dollars are made daily on the forex market, and 4.29999999999 of those dollars goes to the already rich bankers of barclays and JP Morgan.

Let them destroy their own currency and come begging at the doortep of us to let them in, let them fail and destroy everything they have and be broke, dont let them in willingly to destroy us to. they do enough damage in world currencies, let them sleep in the bed they made for themselves, and beg us to bail them out.
This fella's post makes a great deal of sense to me although I do also agree with earlier posts regarding most users not being sophisticated enough to keep their own bitcoins safe (not even sure mine are).  I use coinbase on occassion and it works great but I would be lying if I said I had 100% confidence in them holding my coins.  I basically use them to purchase or sell, and now that my friend has instructed me on how to run a full-node I immediately withdraw my coins as soon as they hit my coinbase account.

Not sure whether or not this circle thing will end up taking off but it seems to be gaining traction.

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June 15, 2014, 10:23:09 PM
 #140


I spoke out by requesting and invite.  Nothing back yet.

I'll totally leverage these guys services just as I do with Coinbase (which is ceasing to be as useful to me as it once was due apparently to Wells Fargo malfeasance) but as with any other organization (in Bicoinland OR in mainstream land) I'll not entrust to them anything I cannot afford to lose.

If Circle damages Bitcoin in any tangible way it is more a deficiency in Bitcoin(istan) than an issue with Circle.  And one which would spell eventual failure at some level anyway.


sig spam anywhere and self-moderated threads on the pol&soc board are for losers.
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