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Author Topic: Regarding Ponzi Sites -- Requesting some attention (not another section thread)  (Read 1595 times)
shorena
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January 14, 2015, 10:20:56 AM
 #21

I received a PM today, here is my answer. I dont like to repeat myself and as I did not see any new arguments, it fits well here.

subject: [Ponzi warning doesn't need the lie]

Hi,

nice of you to drop in. I like how you take the time to tell me what this is about.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421214003
In the first place people choose to gamble, no one is forcing anyone to gamble here.   Secondly, a true Ponzi is based on deception, so I'm not even sure what a Ponzi without deception should be called.    That being said I haven't looked into the details to see if each site is honest, but a couple I checked seem to be completely above board.   

It is not possible for a ponzi to be honest as a ponzi can never prove they do not play themselves against the players. While the transactions on the blockchain can be seen by everyone they are pseudonymous and its very easy to get a new pseudonym (address). This is where these ponzis deceive. They use the deception the blockchain offers them to manipulate people into sending them money. Lets for one second assume that a ponzi does not do this. There is no way for a player to distinguish this ponzi from the others.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421214003
When someone wins in the deception free Ponzi games it isn't stealing and claiming that it is stealing is a lie.

No, not when if a player should win, the money comes from those that have been convinced they have a fair chance of winning themselves. Yet there is no fair chance. Its not a gamble its a ponzi. A paying ponzi is no different from one that does not pay from the start, only that what you consider "honest" ponzis run longer and scam more people. Just because you received a payment to further feed the greed of others does not mean you are not used to manipulate them. I assume for your sake that you are not running a ponzi yourself but just play and there is still hope that you will understand this. 

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421214003
Frankly I don't see much difference between stealing and lying.   There isn't anything wrong with warning people how a Ponzi scheme works.   However there is something very wrong about lying about it.   

How am I lying? Please give me a way that someone running a ponzi can prove they are not cheating, that they are not doing the first or 13th transaction themselves in order to convince others. Only if you can find a way to prove(!) this you have a provably fair gamble and I will gladly participate in Ponzis myself. I am a gambler, I understand that sending money to a casino is a risk as well. But there are honest casinos where you play against them and have a chance to win. Those running a ponzi can manipulate the game to their pleasing and the players have no way to figure this out. This is not gambling, it is not a chance its arbitrariness.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421214003
Yes the people that get paid get paid with other players money and the players that don't get paid lose their money.   That is true, but since people choose to play there isn't any stealing.

They choose to play because they are convinced by people like you that there is a fair chance. I fully understand that I am no ones custodian and its their own decision to play. Yet all you who run and play the ponzi, whine about me and others. Thus I conclude what I do is working and people start to understand that a ponzi is in fact not a gamble.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421214003
So go ahead and warn people if you feel that is your duty, but stop lying about it.   Calling people a thief when they aren't is a lie.   If you can't see that you have a worse problem than the people that create the sites and play the games.     

Thank you for considering this.  By repeating the lie you completely devalue your warning.   


Dont worry I stopped posting that message anyway. IIRC I posted it two or three times, but I started to understand that it is only helping those running the ponzi. Its not that I think its wrong, but its a free bump for the thread every time I post it and I dont want to spam the forum with the same message over and over again. There is enough ponzi related spam already.

Im not really here, its just your imagination.
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January 14, 2015, 08:41:36 PM
 #22

I have received more PMs and will again answer in public as I think this should be discussed openly. On the other hand I also understand that some people might want to stay in the shadows for now.


---
Subject: Re: Ponzi warning doesn't need the lie

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
Thank you for your organized reply. 

Smiley

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
It turns out that the nextponzi may not have been ran fairly.   I don't know for sure as I didn't play, but I also saw your posting on other threads.   I only posted on the nextpozni thread and then PM'ed you because I was fed up would seeing you call *everyone* that ever was paid out by a Ponzi a thief.    It wasn't a well thought out action.

Yes. I did not think long about it. Its my opinion though and every post here should been seen as such. An opinion someone posts. You argued that I lie by expressing my opinion, well thats your opinion. It certainly was exaggerated.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
I do not run a Ponzi and have not set up a site, but I could setup a Ponzi that is 100% fair, I have the skills.   Some people setting up these don't really seem to know what they are really doing.   A few sites look pretty good, but most are just poor copies of the better sites.   However, many sites are using the blockchain and that does leave a record. 

Sure, the blockchain leaves a record, but it is not personal. A 100% fair ponzi would require you to prove that you do not play yourself. Proving you did not do something is impossible in this case. If you find a way around this, Id be curious to hear how you do it, among others.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
Your valid concern seems to be that the owner of the Ponzi is putting there funds in ahead of everyone else.   If that were done it wouldn't be honest, on that I agree.   However your posts have called everyone that gets a payout from a Ponzi a thief.   That is not true.   Saying something that isn't true over and over is a lie. 

Saying something that is not true is not always a lie. You say there exist honest ponzis. By the definition of the words thats not possible. I know you talk about something different when you say honest ponzi, but this something has no name. Maybe you can figure one out. Anyway, a joke is not true either, but telling a joke is usually not considered lying.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
Think about this, Ponzi schemes are everywhere.



Sorry, I could not resist.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
If you are an American and you have family members that collect social security, are they thieves?   FICA taxes are enforced by the government and most people have no choice in the matter.   That is a far worst injustice than people willfully gambling.    If you or I set up a social security system, it would be branded a Ponzi.  There can be little doubt of that.   

Im not going to argue this for several reasons. First it makes no difference. Lets agree its a ponzi, this does not make the ponzis here any better. Second I dont want to argue politics, especially not american politics, this would easily derail the conversation.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
Finally, there are many people that have played these Ponzi sites and have posted they have been paid.  There postings are all over the crypto web sites.  These people have gambled and have succeeded.   They may have been lucky to play when they did, but they claimed they did play and win.   Many provide transaction ID's and I have looked at the block chain transactions.   

They should leave positive feedback. My negative feedback does not mean much if others give different feedback. Yet, all those running the ponzis have newbie accounts that can not build a solid feedback.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
At least the one I looked at in detail appeared to be completely legit.   The owner actually booked a 5% fee there and made over 30 BTC in two days, far more that he could have by gaming his own game and those deductions were on the blockchain.   The winners of that Ponzi game were not thieves.   There are also some posts by people that have lost.  I would assume most choose not to post about that.  Your standard post was on that sites thread, but I didn't look to see if you posted it. 

There was at least one person blindly posting it everywhere. Even in threads that are not ponzis. Anyway, yes I have to admit I did next to no research about the nature of the ponzi when I left the feedback or posted the warning. This is mainly because while I find it hard to believe that someone would willingly play a ponzi there seem to be people that do this. Like you. My warning and my rating however is not directed at those that inform themselves. Anyone that informs themselves would see my rating only confirms they are playing a ponzi. Well if they came for a ponzi, how would that make a difference. The only people I could possibly scare away are those that are not aware how a ponzi works and frankly they should not play a ponzi.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
Now if you want to point out that it is risky and probably unintelligent to play one of these Ponzi games, I really couldn't disagree.  The only bone I have to pick is your widespread labeling large amounts of people as thieves.   

Let me dig them up for the conversation.
#1 https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=922591.msg10128470#msg10128470
"TruthfulPonzi"
1 received, never paid
https://blockchain.info/address/16KFMBDRAhP5gGgzWBZ2zz5zMHe8HBrNpA

#2 https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=921221.msg10118175#msg10118175
"endponzi.com"
5 received, 3 paid
https://www.blocktrail.com/BTC/address/1CTx8GoX2DUpWpUvcjFSquiTwdH7KFdUTk/transactions
Payment/payout structure suggest scam. As they are not 150%

#3 https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=920052.msg10115533#msg10115533
"CryptoInvest"
Edited OP, they had a homepage (see my quote)
54 received, 66 paid
old address (8 months), hard to say what is ponzi and what not.
Id say almost nothing came out of the thread as most of the TX are older.

#4 https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=920592.msg10113452#msg10113452
"24HourPonzzi"
0 received, 0 paid
https://www.blocktrail.com/BTC/address/1BkyicQt4MhKBa4fzNYuguj2CcvLvUu9Vh/transactions

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
Frankly you seriously hurt your message and image by doing that.   Most people easily see how absurd the statement is.  If you really care about what you are saying and want to have impact, stick to the truth.   That is the way to raise doubts in peoples minds.

Again, I stoped posting the message as I agree it does not help my cause. Its better to educate people in a more calm manner. Blatant posts will not change anything.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=xxx date=1421234433
Thank you and I do wish you success. 

 xxx (name removed from quote)

Same to you.

-Sho
---

Another message, from someone else. This message is refering a third person which I will label "zzz" and forth person which I will label "aaa".

---
subject: Hi!

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=yyy date=1421232554
Hey shorena, I was referred to you by zzz (name removed from the quote) after I messaged him regarding this topic. I hope you read carefully and let me know your thoughts Smiley

Hi,

I will do my very best.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=yyy date=1421232554
I am not saying I am going to do this unless trusted members approve, but what would your opinion be on a small maximum (like .5btc), automatic and instant ponzi game ran by a member like myself and another semi-trusted member on this forum? Myself and another bitcointalk member really want to run an official and trustworthy game on this forum but since so many new sites get their trust ratings ruined from running them it has prevented us greatly.

Honestly? If I see a thread like this I would rate it as any other. I have yet to be convinced that a ponzi can be honest, but I have argued that. I am sure you read it.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=yyy date=1421232554
It would work so that we can't cheat out users (everything on blockchain and only one transaction at a time, everything is instant even if there aren't any confirmations) and of course we'd be able to give everyone realtime support.

Both of us have positive trust here.

One issue risen by zzz was this:

Quote from: -zzz- link=action=profile;u=zzz date=1421231849
Well the biggest problem you need to solve is that you and your partner can't send anything to the ponzi to keep it alone. Which is, well, impossible. I stopped giving new ratings but it would be smart to contact aaa and shorena what they think about this.
Personally, I wouldn't do it for profit but rather to keep the program activity up.
What I would do to avoid this flaw is continue reinvesting a portion of my profit (like 20%) until the program dies that way the ending loss doesn't hit members as hard as what it would if i didn't invest.
I wouldn't do it for my own personal gain but yes he is right it is a flaw that is un-preventable even if we wanted to prevent it. There is always that possibility. That's where the trust comes in I suppose.

As I wrote the other person above and as zzz wrote: You would have to prove that you are not participating, which is impossible. I do however support that you refrain from the usual alt accounts which only live as long as the ponzi does.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=yyy date=1421232554
I want to run it by trusted members before we do anything hence I contacted yourself and zzz. I don't want to piss people off I just want to end the scams and have a place where people can play the ponzi game if they choose to play it, and do it safely.

I hope theymos implements the subboard that was discussed. It could have a sticky that would contain all the information people need to understand what the "games" (sorry for this, but I just dont see it as a game) in this section are about.

Quote from: -nameremovedforprivacy- link=action=profile;u=yyy date=1421232554
Just let me know your opinion. I'm just asking around because I think it would be a good idea to get a site like this going by a semi-trusted/established member rather than a newbie.

Thanks for reading, very much looking forward to your response.

I support the established member approach, but the main problem still exists. Its not provably fair and AFAIK it cant be.

I also dont really see the issue with my ratings. I understand that blatant posts in the ponzi threads might piss some people off. I stopped that. My rating pretty much confirms that you are running a ponzi (if/when you do) and if people are scared away by the red number, frankly they should be as they are apparently unable to click the trust link and see what is behind it. If they cant do that, how do you think could they judge the risks involved in a ponzi? I dont patronize anyone, they are free to send you or any other ponzi as many coins as they want.
If it helps: If theymos creates the new section[1] I will stay away from it.

-Sho

[1] https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=920696.msg10135486#msg10135486
erm no I think it was this one: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=923229.msg10135115#msg10135115

Im not really here, its just your imagination.
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January 15, 2015, 12:37:22 AM
 #23

Saying something that is not true is not always a lie. You say there exist honest ponzis. By the definition of the words thats not possible. I know you talk about something different when you say honest ponzi, but this something has no name. Maybe you can figure one out. Anyway, a joke is not true either, but telling a joke is usually not considered lying.

You are thinking deeply about things, that is to be commended.   Still what you present is a loophole.   The posts were basically calling everyone that played a Ponzi a thief if they were paid by the Ponzi.   That wasn't a joke or even a piece of fiction.   However it is a moot point since you have stop making those posts.  For the record, the only problem I had with your posts was that blanket labeling all winners (even if they end up losing) as thieves.   

I also understand your position is limited by your accepted definition of what a Ponzi is.   I think that is a little blind, but I also realize I'm probably blind to many of my own ways of thinking.   

I think the topic of Ponzi scheme is emotional to many since we often forced to contribute to Ponzi schemes.   No point is debating politics, but I think it is very safe to say that many if not most governments around the world routinely force people into very large schemes that while not considered a Ponzi scheme they have all the same attributes of a classical Ponzi scheme with the added injustice that if you don't play you face penalties.  It is easy to see the end results, just look at the massive debts many modern governments have.   From Japan where I live, to the US to the UK to Russia the problems are everywhere.   You are correct with your humor.  Ponzi schemes are everywhere. 
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January 15, 2015, 08:08:19 PM
 #24

Saying something that is not true is not always a lie. You say there exist honest ponzis. By the definition of the words thats not possible. I know you talk about something different when you say honest ponzi, but this something has no name. Maybe you can figure one out. Anyway, a joke is not true either, but telling a joke is usually not considered lying.

You are thinking deeply about things, that is to be commended.   Still what you present is a loophole.   The posts were basically calling everyone that played a Ponzi a thief if they were paid by the Ponzi.   That wasn't a joke or even a piece of fiction.   However it is a moot point since you have stop making those posts.  For the record, the only problem I had with your posts was that blanket labeling all winners (even if they end up losing) as thieves.   

Think about it like Peta's pictures[1]. Sometime you have to exaggerate to get peoples attention.

I also understand your position is limited by your accepted definition of what a Ponzi is.   I think that is a little blind, but I also realize I'm probably blind to many of my own ways of thinking.   
-politics-

I certainly am, we all are formed but what we experienced and by the stories that have been told to us. This is why I suggest that it is a cultural thing. I can only guess, but I suspect that plenty of those in support of ponzis are from east europe/russia. A different background results in a different view of the world. On the other hand I think live would be boring if we all agreed on everything.

IMHO the best solution for both sides is a seperate section as theymos suggested. This results in a seperation of gambling and ponzis/hyip and I can reasonably assume that those still participating do understand the difference as well as the risks involved in ponzi/hyip games.

[1] possibly NSFW: http://www.toxel.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/meat05.jpg

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January 15, 2015, 08:52:15 PM
 #25

+1
It was good to read a couple of thoughtful posts on this subject, without red 48 point font or "I get payed out my .00000001 is be good sceme live long time" contributions.
Just a couple of points:
"Ponzi games" cannot be considered legit (overused word) imo until there is some way of proving that the early (profitable) deposits in a round do not come from the operator of the scheme. I can't see how this can happen, so they cannot be compared to conventional gambling with 'provably fair' and house edge systems.
The comparison with governments providing social benefits by kicking the deficit can down the road in the form of future unfunded liabilities is not valid.
I am no lover of the world's current financial system which is why I am interested in possible alternatives like bitcoin, but there is a huge difference between political decisions taken with few socially acceptable alternatives and deliberately engineered fraud designed to benefit the perpetrator only.

Extraordinary Claims require Extraordinary Evidence
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January 16, 2015, 12:43:45 AM
 #26

I have started a discussion here about How can we create a provably fair Ponzi Game ? If anyone of you have any constructive suggestion, please do drop by...
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January 16, 2015, 07:58:24 AM
 #27

+1
It was good to read a couple of thoughtful posts on this subject, without red 48 point font or "I get payed out my .00000001 is be good sceme live long time" contributions.
Just a couple of points:
"Ponzi games" cannot be considered legit (overused word) imo until there is some way of proving that the early (profitable) deposits in a round do not come from the operator of the scheme. I can't see how this can happen, so they cannot be compared to conventional gambling with 'provably fair' and house edge systems.
The comparison with governments providing social benefits by kicking the deficit can down the road in the form of future unfunded liabilities is not valid.
I am no lover of the world's current financial system which is why I am interested in possible alternatives like bitcoin, but there is a huge difference between political decisions taken with few socially acceptable alternatives and deliberately engineered fraud designed to benefit the perpetrator only.


You are correct that proving the operator of a Ponzi site hasn't put his own deposits in first could be hard to prove.   I agree completely that is an issue.   It wouldn't be in their long term best interest, but most scammers are not long term thinkers.   

However, at the same time, many of the so call proofs accepted for things like dice games could be cooked by a skilled programmer.   Open source isn't a protection either as it may not be the actual source for the program running.   There are many backdoors.   However that type of exploit takes a lot more skill than a Ponzi operator stacking the deck.   The counter point is I don't see how any gambling game can be really made provable fair.   
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January 16, 2015, 11:03:32 AM
 #28

-snip-
However, at the same time, many of the so call proofs accepted for things like dice games could be cooked by a skilled programmer.  

Only if the hash function behind it is broken. The basic principle that makes the rolls (not the site !) proveably fair is that the server can provide a hash of the seed used to generate the rolls. Once the full seed (or the servers part) has been revealed the player can check that its indeed the correct seed and that the rolls had to be like this.

Open source isn't a protection either as it may not be the actual source for the program running.   There are many backdoors.   However that type of exploit takes a lot more skill than a Ponzi operator stacking the deck.   The counter point is I don't see how any gambling game can be really made provable fair.  

It is of course still possible that the operator of a site itself is not honest and runs with the wallet (e.g. dice.ninja), but this is true for all Bitcoin services that do not work directly on the blockchain. Even those running directly on the blockchain coud run, at least with parts of the funds, by stalling the payout for a bit.

I have started a discussion here about How can we create a provably fair Ponzi Game ? If anyone of you have any constructive suggestion, please do drop by...

Thanks, Ill drop in

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January 16, 2015, 11:21:26 AM
 #29

-snip-
However, at the same time, many of the so call proofs accepted for things like dice games could be cooked by a skilled programmer.  

Only if the hash function behind it is broken. The basic principle that makes the rolls (not the site !) proveably fair is that the server can provide a hash of the seed used to generate the rolls. Once the full seed (or the servers part) has been revealed the player can check that its indeed the correct seed and that the rolls had to be like this.

Just a couple points, from a programming point of view.

1) The seeds are not meaningful unless you can actually exercise the code and produce the same throws.   Unless you know for certain the exact bytes running on the server, you can't be sure what you are seeing.   There are many possible cheats here, but they are complex in nature for an unskilled programmer.    I won't say more, but there are many possibilities.

2) You can still cheat without mucking with the random numbers by favorable rounding of the thresholds, etc.   A ton of little nicks can add up and if caught ... "Thank you for finding a bug!"

The problem is proof in the crypto world is only hash deep.   You can wrap a cheat in proof and it would still cheat.   
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