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Showing 20 of 41 results by acid_rain
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Re: Brawker replacement ?
by
acid_rain
on 08/07/2015, 00:43:20 UTC

thanks
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Board Service Discussion
Re: Brawker replacement ?
by
acid_rain
on 06/07/2015, 19:42:22 UTC
There is purse.io which you can things from Amazon at a discounted rate, but not anywhere on the net.
Yeah me too. I thought you could only buy Amazon-related stuff from your wishlist. How does purse.io verify the purchase then? Does amazon give you a tracking number?

If I remember well, you need an Amazon order number for purse.io to work.
Amazon provides an order number which purse.io can lookup. The Bitcoin is kept in escrow until the item arrives at which point the Bitcoin is released by the Bitcoin seller.

thanks. but my original question was, can I buy anything from anywhere on the web with purse.io, or does it strictly have to be Amazon?
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Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Blockchain split of 4 July 2015
by
acid_rain
on 06/07/2015, 19:22:34 UTC
BTC has gone rogue. CFR has taken over biatch. '

While this will only inflate the price even more, legit businesses are hurting man.
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Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Blockchain split of 4 July 2015
by
acid_rain
on 06/07/2015, 19:19:47 UTC
This is ridiculous. I think people are ignoring the fact that 30 confirmations is freakin 12 hours. What a coincidence right? So everyone was talking about forks last week, and now there are rogues and new chains being built.

People make stuff up, and then someone takes the hint and makes it reality. People are so oblivious to what's happening right under their noses.
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Re: Brawker replacement ?
by
acid_rain
on 06/07/2015, 19:15:03 UTC
There is purse.io which you can things from Amazon at a discounted rate, but not anywhere on the net.
Yeah me too. I thought you could only buy Amazon-related stuff from your wishlist. How does purse.io verify the purchase then? Does amazon give you a tracking number?

If I remember well, you need an Amazon order number for purse.io to work.
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Board Services
Re: Looking for site moderators, blog writers, newsletter writers
by
acid_rain
on 30/06/2015, 10:05:17 UTC
Seems interesting, I'm interested in the moderator position, but...

Quote
Will be rewarded with a share of total profits.

Does this mean that you will not be paying anything upfront??

Hey, I don't mean to answer for him but this is what he showed me. Can the other guys he's talking to please confirm if they're at this stage of talks with him or not, cause I haven't heard back from him in a day now.

In his pm, he's doing kind of like a pre-interview thing with people to separate the people who are really interested from those who just want a quick buck.

He already built a porn review site which has around 300k subs a month. He showed me on teamviewer. He logged in the admin panel and showed me his writers. They even have pornstars writing for them !! And the porn dvd's they get to review are FREE. Can you imagine that? All 10 of them get free dvds sent to them by the agencies whenever they release something new.

Apparently the way he said he built it was, he got around 10 ppl who are invested in it timewise, and that would be serious about the whole project and treat it as if it is their own and from there it grew really big. They even got some AVN awards from what I researched.

Then he basically split the affiliate profits between the guys and himself. He as the owner, owns the money accounts, but they get paid, when he gets paid.

I think his model really works from what he showed me on Skype and teamviewer. Alone you can't build a site and hope to be successful. You need posters, bragging about it on social media and stuff to generate buzz etc.

Hope this answers your question.

P.S. satnof, can you please update me with at what stage you're in. How many people did you find that qualify? Are we holding some kind of group meating or hangout soon?
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Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Gavin is an Agent
by
acid_rain
on 30/06/2015, 00:05:14 UTC
I find it so fascinating to see what people think "agents" do.

yeap, everybody is just full of some hollywood blockbusters and similar stuff. common agent is just doing paperwork and bureaucracy, but it least is funny to read, what others imagine behind agent role:)

I point my finger towards The Bourne movies. They're the culprit!
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Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Could Satoshi Nakamoto be the CIA/NSA?
by
acid_rain
on 29/06/2015, 23:58:48 UTC
eff that. Let's just speculate. Life is just more fun that way!!! Anyone got a meme to share?  Cheesy
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Re: Looking for site moderators, blog writers, newsletter writers
by
acid_rain
on 29/06/2015, 04:36:33 UTC
Hey thanks for the pm earlier. I sent an answer to all of your questions. I do think its viable for the bitcoin community. Heck you're giving an opportunity to earn btc for practically nothing, so its always gonna work. And the best part of it, is you're not gambling with your money. You're investing it towards a realistic goal.

I strongly do believe though that in unity lies the force. What do I mean by that?

More heads put together will come up with more creative ideas than just one.

If you can manage to get a staff of at least 5 posters each posting 2 articles a day to your blog, that's 300 articles/month my man, that type of volume of content is no joke. We would all be sailing to Hawaii in 3 months time, if you know what I mean. Smiley That is if you decide to give us part of the profit and access to see what's really going on behind the scenes such as Google Analytics and the admin module you were talking about in original OP post.

From the response you're getting I think you can manage it. And as you mentioned you got PM's I highly urge you to consider getting on board as many people as you can at this point. Maybe fire off the lazy people if they're not active enough. Of course you can hire the mod that you wish or that performs the best from the bunch to be the leader/coordinator of the posters.

Seriously though I think it does have potential. My only suggestion to you, is consider all the options.

I would certainly make it my priority like it was my own pet project if you give me a chance and a share.

Hope that I gave you some creative ideas for your venture. Btw I found two links which don't work at the moment. If you click them nothing happens (check PM).

Looking forward to your reply.

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Re: what you like best in Bitcoin ?
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 18:32:59 UTC


There are pitfalls to being your own bank.

Ultimately you have to cash it out, as it stand right now. And if you do a large cashout to your bank account, the government'x tax agency will be on you like a hawk for not having declared the money.

Think Al Capone.

Well is not like we are looking to break the law and take to the bank over 10k usd with out proof of generating income, we all have to pay taxes specially if your self employee or Independent, every most operate with the law at all times.   

yup, both you and gentlemand are correct, but you're probably two of the few people who understand this. Many people will fall to this trap when they cashout a large chunk of btc to their bank accounts.

We are only hearing of recent cases and occurrences, like the guy who bought a house with his btc, and the other guy cashed the btc out in one fell swoop. Or the sheep darknet market guy, who was doxxed and thought he was in the clear.

Etc. etc.
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Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Gavin is an Agent
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 18:24:57 UTC
Quote from: Bitcoin.pdf
A  purely   peer-to-peer   version   of   electronic   cash   would   allow   online
payments  to  be  sent   directly  from  one  party  to  another  without   going  through  a
financial institution.

And which flaws are preventing it from achieving this stated goal?

Some of them:

* Payments cannot be reversed, even when coins are sent to addresses that non one has the key, or as a result of crime.  That makes it unacceptable for most comercial and individual uses.

* Users are anonymous, which makes it much more attractive to criminals (much more so than cash, for obvious reasons).

* The fixed supply created the expectation of fabulous gains that turned it into a speculative pyramid schema

* That "ponzification" in turn resulted in extremely volatile price, that makes a bad currency.

* The block reward and the market price were too high, leading to a hypertrophied and unsustainable mining industry.

* For that reason, the cost per transaction is way too high.

* Mining got inevitably centralized (last time I checked, the top 5 Chinese miners had 60% of the hashpower).

* There is no mechanism to reward the relay nodes, which carry increasing load.

* Its design cannot support 1 billion users, maybe not even 10 million, even indirectly.

And a few more.  Before you say it, yes, I know that many bitcoiners see those as advantages rather than flaws.

As you said most of those points are considered to be pros rather than cons for 99% of the community.

The last 2 points are where the real problem is.
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Re: what you like best in Bitcoin ?
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 18:18:31 UTC
for me Bitcoin allows me to hold some saving out of the banking system and the hands of the government.

pretty much everything and the same has you, being able to be my own bank, look for opportunities to generate bitcoin, offer some of my skills to gain bitcoin, trading, buying and selling, business opportunities which is pretty much big right now, one thing i do hate is not being able to mine in the beginning Smiley

There are pitfalls to being your own bank.

Ultimately you have to cash it out, as it stand right now. And if you do a large cashout to your bank account, the government'x tax agency will be on you like a hawk for not having declared the money.

Think Al Capone.
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Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Gavin is an Agent
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 18:01:35 UTC
To fix those flaws and allow it to achieve its stated goal, we need a few more ingenious inventions; which we cannot guess when oor whether they will be made.

What is Bitcoin's stated goal Jorge?

It is written right at the beginning of Satoshi's paper, as clearly as it could be.

Quote from: Bitcoin.pdf
A  purely   peer-to-peer   version   of   electronic   cash   would   allow   online
payments  to  be  sent   directly  from  one  party  to  another  without   going  through  a
financial institution.

And which flaws are preventing it from achieving this stated goal?

coinbase, bitpay et al. being the new financial institutions? ^^

You will always have the coinbases and bitpays of the world. Lamen people need to be spoon fed and things made easy. In software engineering terms its called user-friendliness. Otherwise there would never be a major adoption of anything.
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Re: Gavin is an Agent
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 17:57:27 UTC
hum i thought the State was already separated from money, with central private banskters..
Why would you think that?

Do people use central bank money because of free choice, or because the central banks benefit from State-granted monopoly privileges?

No one is arguing that BTC isn't a godsend from the bowels of human ingenuity. But maybe the protocol itself needs to be rethought from a software engineering point of view into making it scalable for the future.
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Re: Gavin is an Agent
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 17:55:08 UTC
Well I do agree that when I first heard about its design, the whole idea of a public ledger (which is here to stay and be analysed forever) has flaws from a conceptual point of view IMO. Maybe take the good parts of BTC and redefine a new protocol would be more adequate in the case that BTC collapses on its own weight.
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Re: Looking for site moderators, blog writers, newsletter writers
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 17:41:23 UTC
I'm interested in the free review account. I can help promotions by putting it in my signature if you want.

Since I'm online a lot of the day it would be nice to have a part-time thing going on. Care to tell us more, or should we just pm you?

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Re: btc-arbs.com - Update: dead HYIP, Refund progress: BTC-arbs still doing refunds
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 17:22:12 UTC
All I know is that the intervals between our payments have grown increasingly longer as the last year has passed, as has the frequency of communication here. It makes me question his resolve in getting this debt paid.

Freejack i remember you from the very beginning of this thread when I posted a long wall of text about what he was proposing wouldn't work in real world. It's commendable that you kept this thread alive throughout this year. Kudos!

If I'm not mistaken you were one of the big initial investors. Care to say how much is he left to pay you in total? As I'm assuming you won't be seeing that money back....it has been a year already so forget about it I think.

 
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Re: Gavin is an Agent
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 17:14:41 UTC
Maybe. A fork will severely damage the price.

The hard fork to increase the max block size should have been a no-brainer and a non-event, a routine maintenance  action predicted  and proposed by Satoshi himself when he added the arbitrary 1 MB limit.  Why has it become the most dreadful menace to the future of bitcoin?

My best guess is that the promises that the Blockcstream guys made to their investors, when they got their funding, depend on there being no block size increase, no matter how modest.  That would explain their uncompromising and hysterical opposition to the increase -- and the changes that they are making to the protocol.

Specifically, I guess that they promised investors that bitcoin network would become congested by 2016, and then users would be forced to move to some "overlay network" that would carry most of the payment traffic, with only occasional settlements being made on the old bitcoin network.  

Blockstream (they must have said) would then be the key player in that "overlay space", because they already were developing the technology that will make the overlay network possible (sidechains, at the time).  Moreover, since several key developers were partners or employees of Blocksrteam, they had commit control of BitcoinCore, the "official" implementation of the protocol; so they would be able to make any change that they needed to the protocol (like new opcodes), while blocking any change that competitors may need, or that might make the overlay network economically unattractive -- such as a block size increase.  

But (the investors must have asked) if the capacity of the bitcoin network itself is not increased, the number of transactions will forever be limited to 300'000 per day; so how will mining continue to be viable while the block reward gets halved?  Well, Blockstream's forecast (and this is no guess) is that by 2016, as the network becomes congested, there will arise a "fee market", where bitcoin users would have to offer higher and higher fees in order to buy space on the next block.  If the average transaction fee increased to 1.5 USD or more, the revenue from fees (450'000 USD/day) would compensate the halving of the block reward, and there would be no drop in the hashpower.    

To make that "fee market" more "efficient", Blockstream was counting on a couple of changes to the queue-management part of the core software ("replace-by-fee" and "child-pays-for-parent") that would allow clients to increment the fees of transactions that were stuck in the queue, and thus jump over other transactions with smaller fees.

According to this plan, the bitcoin network would be worth using only for large-value transactions, including the "export" of bitcoins to sidechains and settlements between the sidechains.  (Since then it became clear that sidechains will not work as intended, but Blockstream found a new vaporware to take their place in the plan, the Lightning Network.)  Most of the individual users, and services like BitPay and Bitstamp, would be forced to move to the overlay network.  

If that is the plan that they sold to their investors, their attitude would made perfect sense.  Gavin's proposal to increase the block size not only would postpone the need for the overlay network by many years, but also would show that Blockstream did not have control of the protocol.   The investors who bought those claims would be quite displeased, to put it mildly.  

So, at first Blockstream tried to block Gavin's proposal with the claim that it would make nodes terribly expensive.  Which is nonsense, since an increase in the *max size*  would not cause any immediate change to the *average size*: the latter would just continue growing (hopefully) at the current rate, and increase (gradually) beyond 1 MB only in a few years time.  But since the increase proposal has been reduced to 8 MB, they ran out of technical arguments.  So they had to resort to spreading FUD about the terrible risk of a hard fork (while doing soft forks themselves) and personal attacks on Gavin and Mike.

I have no particular admiration for Gavin.  He should have distanced himself from the Shrem Karpelès & Friends Foundation when it started to smell bad; instead, he stayed there as long as it was paying his salary, and even criticized Antonopoulos for leaving it.  And I had not noticed Mike's existence until a month ago.  

Yet I must recognize that they are only trying to keep bitcoin working for a few more years as it was intended to work, and as all the community has come to expect it to work.  Blockstream, on the other hand, is honoring their name, in an ironic and unintended way: their plan is to block the bitcoin stream, so that all the bitcoiners are forced to buy their water...

Moreover, Gavin and Mike have the prudence, competence, technical knowledge, and common sense that are needed to manage a large software project like bitcoin, that manages hundreds of millions of dollars for hundreds of thousands of users.  

Whereas the new core developers, while they may be expert cryptographers and clever hackers, clearly lack those qualities. They seem unable to understand Mike's explanation of how queues behave as the traffic approaches the channel's capacity.  They are unable to see the "fee market" will not be a market but a chaotic melee.  They cannot make any quantitative estimates of what the traffic and fees will be in their planned future. (Had they done so, they would see that an overlay network will not solve the scalability problem, either.)  

One of them explained that all wallet apps out there would have to be modified, so that, instead of just signing a transaction offline, issuing it, and disconnecting, the client would have to first check the queues at the nodes to guess an appropriate minimum fee F, then sign several transactions with fees F, 2F, 4F, 8F, etc., issue the first one, then remain connected to the network, so that his wallet app can watch the queues, re-issuing the other versions as needed in order to remain in front of the the other clients (who are of course doing the same), until the transaction is confirmed; or until the app runs out of pre-signed transactions, and has to ask the client whether he wants to keep trying, in which case he would have to sign a few more.  And tha dev called it "a trivial change", because it would require only "a few lines of code ...

And, worst of all, they want to make bitcoin unusable for its stated goal, in order to force users to move to another network that has not been designed yet, may never work, will not be like bitcoin at all, and will not solve the scalability problem either...

As you may know, I am very skeptical about the long-term success of bitcoin, and I have no love at all for the pyramid investment scheme that has been built on top of it.  Yet, I was expecting to see years of slow price decline, perhaps even delayed by another price bubble or two.  But now, after watching this war and realizing what the players are up to, my hopes for a quick, spectacularly comical collapse have been revived...

  

Sir very interesting read. You write in a clear manner. but the whole wall of text hurt my eyeball. You should consider including a TL;DR summary whenever doing a long essay.

and yes, if it collapses due to its poor design flaws and dodgy patchwork, then yes I would agree with you that it would be a quick comical demise of btc but nonetheless it would have given humanity a blueprint.
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Re: Bitcoin Evil Plot?
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 16:14:05 UTC
Is it possible to cut off a person or ban them from spending their bitcoins?

Bitcoin to me seems like the NWO Global centralized currency.


Quote
And he causes all, the small and the great, and the rich and the poor, and the free men and the slaves, to be given a mark on their right hand or on their forehead, and he provides that no one will be able to buy or to sell, except the one who has the mark, either the name of the beast or the number of his name. Here is wisdom. Let him who has understanding calculate the number of the beast, for the number is that of a man; and his number is six hundred and sixty-six.

http://libertyblitzkrieg.com/2015/03/13/red-alert-ibm-moves-to-create-a-centralized-central-bank-controlled-blockchain-for-currency-control/

Well to be completely honest here.

The bible does infact say that an antichrist will arise out and take credit for some of the world's most resourceful inventions.

Not sure if the Bible was talking about BTC there. Smiley
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Re: Could Satoshi Nakamoto be the CIA/NSA?
by
acid_rain
on 28/06/2015, 16:03:55 UTC
The NSA secret files were cracked and absconded by Eric Snowden. The CIA bungled intelligence and misled us into an unnecessary Iraq War.

These two organizations are far too inept and compromised to come up with such an elaborate scheme.

Are you saying they're dumb? Cause if you see what you stand to gain from the Iraq war. Isn't it obvious that you're literally taking every little scrap of fossil fuel oil left on the planet, while you're making the rest of the world change to gas power stations and heavy subsidies on households who invest in solar arrays.

NSA has been literally spying on its own citizens. It knows that rebellion is brewing in the hearts and minds of many. So it has to be on top of the situation just in case a sophisticated defiance rebellion starts.

Your general President Eisenhower warned against a milatary industrial complex that gets out of hand.