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Author Topic: BitStamp - hacked and down  (Read 9281 times)
podyx
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January 11, 2015, 01:38:03 AM
 #181

I posted on here almost a year ago that bitstamp was just a government honeypot and that it was only a matter a time before they ran off with people's coins.

Like 99% of the time - I was right.

 Cheesy



seriouscoin
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January 11, 2015, 02:32:09 AM
 #182

They just changed the servers.

You are wrong. They changed their hot wallet to use multi-sig. Everyone withdrawing can see this and it has already been reported multiple times.


The bug was/IS in their platform. It doesn't matter how many signatures they are using. Smiley


Wow , you're dumb as a rock arent you?

Always assume your platform is compromised. What matters is what data can be stolen....., meaningless data? Mutisig wallet would allow them using a third device to sign tx.


You are smart, I admit that. Please do not read further. Smiley

If you think that the users details(passports, user accounts, utility bills, addresses, bank accounts) are meaningless data, it ok. You are the smart one and you know better. Smiley


Keep proving everyone that you're the dumbest of all here?

What makes you think such data is stored online? Yes you can submit those data online, it does not mean they will be stored online once they're processed. You got dumber everytime you post dont you?
picolo
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January 11, 2015, 01:06:46 PM
 #183

They just changed the servers.

You are wrong. They changed their hot wallet to use multi-sig. Everyone withdrawing can see this and it has already been reported multiple times.


The bug was/IS in their platform. It doesn't matter how many signatures they are using. Smiley


Wow , you're dumb as a rock arent you?

Always assume your platform is compromised. What matters is what data can be stolen....., meaningless data? Mutisig wallet would allow them using a third device to sign tx.


You are smart, I admit that. Please do not read further. Smiley

If you think that the users details(passports, user accounts, utility bills, addresses, bank accounts) are meaningless data, it ok. You are the smart one and you know better. Smiley


Keep proving everyone that you're the dumbest of all here?

What makes you think such data is stored online? Yes you can submit those data online, it does not mean they will be stored online once they're processed. You got dumber everytime you post dont you?


You are right but they never said it was stored offline either.
mayax (OP)
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January 11, 2015, 05:31:37 PM
 #184

They just changed the servers.

You are wrong. They changed their hot wallet to use multi-sig. Everyone withdrawing can see this and it has already been reported multiple times.


The bug was/IS in their platform. It doesn't matter how many signatures they are using. Smiley


Wow , you're dumb as a rock arent you?

Always assume your platform is compromised. What matters is what data can be stolen....., meaningless data? Mutisig wallet would allow them using a third device to sign tx.


You are smart, I admit that. Please do not read further. Smiley

If you think that the users details(passports, user accounts, utility bills, addresses, bank accounts) are meaningless data, it ok. You are the smart one and you know better. Smiley


Keep proving everyone that you're the dumbest of all here?

What makes you think such data is stored online? Yes you can submit those data online, it does not mean they will be stored online once they're processed. You got dumber everytime you post dont you?


Please try to learn a little bit about how the data bases are working. Your language shows that you have a "Bronx" school....but you still have to time to do it, grandpa.... Smiley

Bitstamp has databases which are online. Each of their clients has an account which contains name, address, email, bank account, etc....so, everything MUST be online otherwise you won't be able to login. These data bases were compromised too, so all the Bitstamp's clients must be worried about their personal details.

I am sure that you won't understand what i am saying, so I will give you some examples to learn from them.

It is not a shame to do it. It is a "shame" to poses as a smart guy when you are not ... Smiley

http://www.tomsguide.com/us/biggest-data-breaches,news-19083.html

When a "financial" website is hacked, ALL the details are compromised. The hacker stole the Bitstamp' funds for now because this was his main target BUT he had access to ALL the Bitstamp databases.

SirChiko
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January 11, 2015, 05:36:34 PM
 #185

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

The only online casino on which i won something. I made 17mBTC from 1mBTC in like 15 minutes.  This is not paid AD!

▀Check it out yourself▀
mayax (OP)
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January 11, 2015, 05:48:40 PM
 #186

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

it is not about back up. it is about that the hacker stole ALL the information stored on Bitstamp's server.

well, maybe you don't care about your personal information(you should because it is about your life, money) but there are many others who do....Smiley

SirChiko
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January 11, 2015, 06:38:08 PM
 #187

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

it is not about back up. it is about that the hacker stole ALL the information stored on Bitstamp's server.

well, maybe you don't care about your personal information(you should because it is about your life, money) but there are many others who do....Smiley


What are you talking about? They stole hot wallet funds nothing more afaik.

The only online casino on which i won something. I made 17mBTC from 1mBTC in like 15 minutes.  This is not paid AD!

▀Check it out yourself▀
mayax (OP)
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January 11, 2015, 07:22:05 PM
 #188

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

it is not about back up. it is about that the hacker stole ALL the information stored on Bitstamp's server.

well, maybe you don't care about your personal information(you should because it is about your life, money) but there are many others who do....Smiley


What are you talking about? They stole hot wallet funds nothing more afaik.

how did they stole the "hot wallet" funds? did they guess the password? Smiley
SirChiko
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January 11, 2015, 07:24:33 PM
 #189

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

it is not about back up. it is about that the hacker stole ALL the information stored on Bitstamp's server.

well, maybe you don't care about your personal information(you should because it is about your life, money) but there are many others who do....Smiley


What are you talking about? They stole hot wallet funds nothing more afaik.

how did they stole the "hot wallet" funds? did they guess the password? Smiley
And for what would they need customer infos when they got away with 19k coins? lol

The only online casino on which i won something. I made 17mBTC from 1mBTC in like 15 minutes.  This is not paid AD!

▀Check it out yourself▀
mayax (OP)
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January 11, 2015, 07:26:33 PM
 #190

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

it is not about back up. it is about that the hacker stole ALL the information stored on Bitstamp's server.

well, maybe you don't care about your personal information(you should because it is about your life, money) but there are many others who do....Smiley


What are you talking about? They stole hot wallet funds nothing more afaik.

how did they stole the "hot wallet" funds? did they guess the password? Smiley
And for what would they need customer infos when they got away with 19k coins? lol

for getting more funds, of course..and they will.
The peoples are greedy and also they want to make more if they are more than 5-6 hackers. The girls are expensive these days Smiley

Also, a Mercedes S class is 120K + a nice house is over 500K + other expenses...and you will see that the funds will not be enough to live Smiley)
picolo
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January 11, 2015, 07:27:04 PM
 #191

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

it is not about back up. it is about that the hacker stole ALL the information stored on Bitstamp's server.

well, maybe you don't care about your personal information(you should because it is about your life, money) but there are many others who do....Smiley


What are you talking about? They stole hot wallet funds nothing more afaik.

how did they stole the "hot wallet" funds? did they guess the password? Smiley

I don't think Bitstamp will explain exactly how they did it. Maybe a combination of malware, inside informations and weak procedures.
The potential amount to steal is so big they could have invest money to get a chance to steal by buying up informations or coming to the bitstamp offices to steal the money.
mayax (OP)
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January 11, 2015, 07:35:56 PM
 #192

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

it is not about back up. it is about that the hacker stole ALL the information stored on Bitstamp's server.

well, maybe you don't care about your personal information(you should because it is about your life, money) but there are many others who do....Smiley


What are you talking about? They stole hot wallet funds nothing more afaik.

how did they stole the "hot wallet" funds? did they guess the password? Smiley

I don't think Bitstamp will explain exactly how they did it. Maybe a combination of malware, inside informations and weak procedures.
The potential amount to steal is so big they could have invest money to get a chance to steal by buying up informations or coming to the bitstamp offices to steal the money.

agree with you.
malware = access to all the information including customer's details.

Their clients will receive a direct impact very soon. they have to change their passwords for emails, Bitstamp account, Bitcoin, etc.
Too bad they cannot change their passports, utility bills, bank accounts. Identity theft was the most prevalent problem plaguing consumers in 2014.
SirChiko
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January 11, 2015, 07:40:54 PM
 #193

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

it is not about back up. it is about that the hacker stole ALL the information stored on Bitstamp's server.

well, maybe you don't care about your personal information(you should because it is about your life, money) but there are many others who do....Smiley


What are you talking about? They stole hot wallet funds nothing more afaik.

how did they stole the "hot wallet" funds? did they guess the password? Smiley

I don't think Bitstamp will explain exactly how they did it. Maybe a combination of malware, inside informations and weak procedures.
The potential amount to steal is so big they could have invest money to get a chance to steal by buying up informations or coming to the bitstamp offices to steal the money.

agree with you.
malware = access to all the information including customer's details.

Their clients will receive a direct impact very soon. they have to change their passwords for emails, Bitstamp account, Bitcoin, etc.
Too bad they cannot change their passports, utility bills, bank accounts. Identity theft was the most prevalent problem plaguing consumers in 2014.
Well, sooner or later we will see, i personaly belive the person was so excited they took the coins and ran.
Also i don't think it was malware, well who knows.

The only online casino on which i won something. I made 17mBTC from 1mBTC in like 15 minutes.  This is not paid AD!

▀Check it out yourself▀
mayax (OP)
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January 12, 2015, 12:57:36 PM
 #194

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

it is not about back up. it is about that the hacker stole ALL the information stored on Bitstamp's server.

well, maybe you don't care about your personal information(you should because it is about your life, money) but there are many others who do....Smiley


What are you talking about? They stole hot wallet funds nothing more afaik.

how did they stole the "hot wallet" funds? did they guess the password? Smiley

I don't think Bitstamp will explain exactly how they did it. Maybe a combination of malware, inside informations and weak procedures.
The potential amount to steal is so big they could have invest money to get a chance to steal by buying up informations or coming to the bitstamp offices to steal the money.

agree with you.
malware = access to all the information including customer's details.

Their clients will receive a direct impact very soon. they have to change their passwords for emails, Bitstamp account, Bitcoin, etc.
Too bad they cannot change their passports, utility bills, bank accounts. Identity theft was the most prevalent problem plaguing consumers in 2014.
Well, sooner or later we will see, i personaly belive the person was so excited they took the coins and ran.
Also i don't think it was malware, well who knows.

These persons are not SO excited. It's their "job" Smiley

Of course, 5 MIL is a VERY high amount but if there is more than 3-4 persons they will want more Smiley
SirChiko
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January 12, 2015, 12:59:24 PM
 #195

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

it is not about back up. it is about that the hacker stole ALL the information stored on Bitstamp's server.

well, maybe you don't care about your personal information(you should because it is about your life, money) but there are many others who do....Smiley


What are you talking about? They stole hot wallet funds nothing more afaik.

how did they stole the "hot wallet" funds? did they guess the password? Smiley

I don't think Bitstamp will explain exactly how they did it. Maybe a combination of malware, inside informations and weak procedures.
The potential amount to steal is so big they could have invest money to get a chance to steal by buying up informations or coming to the bitstamp offices to steal the money.

agree with you.
malware = access to all the information including customer's details.

Their clients will receive a direct impact very soon. they have to change their passwords for emails, Bitstamp account, Bitcoin, etc.
Too bad they cannot change their passports, utility bills, bank accounts. Identity theft was the most prevalent problem plaguing consumers in 2014.
Well, sooner or later we will see, i personaly belive the person was so excited they took the coins and ran.
Also i don't think it was malware, well who knows.

These persons are not SO excited. It's their "job" Smiley

Of course, 5 MIL is a VERY high amount but if there is more than 3-4 persons they will want more Smiley
I doubt it was more than 1 person, wich hacker cooperates with others lol, makes the risk higher.

The only online casino on which i won something. I made 17mBTC from 1mBTC in like 15 minutes.  This is not paid AD!

▀Check it out yourself▀
btc-facebook
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January 12, 2015, 02:15:42 PM
 #196

And it's back up + they have covered all the loss on user sides just like i thought Tongue

They provide free fee trading for a few time

They will be more serious this time to make more competent exchanger
Pustul
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January 12, 2015, 02:27:33 PM
 #197

They have just confirmed my fiat withdrawal, I'll report back once I have the money on my bank account Smiley
mayax (OP)
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January 12, 2015, 03:11:17 PM
 #198

They have just confirmed my fiat withdrawal, I'll report back once I have the money on my bank account Smiley

Be happy for that Smiley

keep your money in bank and do not buy soon. the price will fall under 190 USD soon.
Bizmark13
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January 12, 2015, 05:31:46 PM
 #199

...And that's why the exchangers are having very, very low fees of 0.2% for trading or free for withdrawals. They do not care about these money. The REAL money are made with the Bitcoin price. How can financial company exists with 0.2% per transaction?

Super tight spreads aren't uncommon in forex trading where fierce competition between retail FX participants is the norm. Also, compared to traditional financial companies, overall transaction costs are probably lower as it only costs a couple of cents to send/receive any amount of BTC to/from anywhere in the world in minutes. So with the lower fees, lower overhead costs, and lack of middlemen, I think it would be possible for an exchange to make a profit by just trading and withdrawal fees alone.

Even when Mt. Gox had 800,000 BTC (worth almost $1 billion in late 2013), it was still a pretty small-sized company. Their expenses probably weren't that much compared to more traditional financial companies that deal with similar amounts of money. Scottrade has 4,000 employees and GAIN has about 400. A Bitcoin exchange would have, what? 5? 10? Maybe 20 tops?
mayax (OP)
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January 12, 2015, 06:01:05 PM
 #200

...And that's why the exchangers are having very, very low fees of 0.2% for trading or free for withdrawals. They do not care about these money. The REAL money are made with the Bitcoin price. How can financial company exists with 0.2% per transaction?

Super tight spreads aren't uncommon in forex trading where fierce competition between retail FX participants is the norm. Also, compared to traditional financial companies, overall transaction costs are probably lower as it only costs a couple of cents to send/receive any amount of BTC to/from anywhere in the world in minutes. So with the lower fees, lower overhead costs, and lack of middlemen, I think it would be possible for an exchange to make a profit by just trading and withdrawal fees alone.

Even when Mt. Gox had 800,000 BTC (worth almost $1 billion in late 2013), it was still a pretty small-sized company. Their expenses probably weren't that much compared to more traditional financial companies that deal with similar amounts of money. Scottrade has 4,000 employees and GAIN has about 400. A Bitcoin exchange would have, what? 5? 10? Maybe 20 tops?

The forex market is HUGE. A LOT of people are playing in it(including BIG banks). You cannot compare Bitcoin market with 1 MIL users with the forex market.

MT Gox had ONE full time employee and 3-4 part time contractors(for customer support-tickets). Try to not believe everything these guys are trying to show "you". They are small companies not corporations.

It's not something bad to be a small company. It's absolutely normal to have a small and cosy office when you run an exchanger... but these people wants bling-bling. They want to be like Trump or Zuckerberg overnight  Smiley

The bad thing is when you want to be what they are not... Smiley


You said "Mt. Gox had 800,000 BTC (worth almost $1 billion)". Let's say you have this Bitcoin. Who is will give you the money if you would have 1 billion worth of Bitcoin? Coinbase? Bitstamp, BTC-China? Smiley

Yes, nobody. because they do not have these money. But if you want to withdraw a billion from a real forex company, you will get it ASAP. Smiley
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