... A small piece of the original dev team, all of the code that has been written, and a shred of 888 passion among us still exists. Most (if not all) of the original dev team would certainly get involved again if the situation improved considerably. Like most people, I have several other priorities right now but I will personally be putting the finishing touches on the new wallet as soon as possible and then ensuring that 888 it at least back and trading on Bittrex. Several developers, including myself and the developer of another (fairly prominent) altcoin, have gone through the code and there is nothing there that could specifically cause issues with OctoCoin payouts. Regardless, some issue apparently popped up exclusive to Bittrex (after months without incident despite the same code being used) and, as a result, the new wallet will be 100% from scratch.
Once a new wallet is released and things are stabilized, hopefully things will begin moving in the right direction again...
Waiting for a new wallet and return of the fucking dev team!
What's happening, bholzer?
What is the situation?
LOL. same old same old. I forgot this phony clown was still around, still doing the same "I'm just an innocent victim of FUD for trying to be a light in the darkness" song and dance since the last time I ran across one of his other scam projects back in like January. Pretending to be above it all and then deleting even mildly uncomfortable or off-message posts left right and center, which is why the fool gets so many angry PMs in the first place. There used to be a scam-identification post in one of these boards that listed 10 or so bullet points that marked the most obvious signs of a scam, and this bholzer's projects checked off half of them right out of the gate. Constant promises, moving goalposts, calling valid criticism of broken promises and missed targets "FUD" and "trolling", coins with no technical merit that are just trying to latch on to some bandwagon of the week fad, appropriating others property (celebrity fame) for their own gains, and offering a few laughable pennies in return as "thanks" for signing the celeb on to a merch contract without their express permission. You name it.