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Showing 10 of 10 results by wonderbash
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Board Service Discussion
Re: BTC-e
by
wonderbash
on 02/04/2013, 15:34:14 UTC
It's not down on my end, what are you seeing on your side?
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Topic
Board Beginners & Help
Re: How long until Bitcoins render Paypal obsolete, if ever?
by
wonderbash
on 02/04/2013, 14:37:44 UTC
In my opinion, it is always good to have competition - Competition keeps the market competitive. Hopefully this will influence paypal to lower their fees, or add extra features that make them better to use. But I'm still looking forward to see bitcoin success Wink
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Board Beginners & Help
Re: Bitcoin future? Figure it out.
by
wonderbash
on 02/04/2013, 07:50:25 UTC
It is indeed hard to express bitcoins in that many decimal places, that's why we have mbtc and ubtc, just as we have micro, nano in real life to measure something on a small scale. I don't think that this will be a problem as the most conventional unit will be used throughout the time as bitcoin mature. Just take the cpu processor speed as an example, we refer to them as 1ghz, 2ghz etc instead of 1 000 000 000 hertz.

However, I do agree with you that the traditional bitcoin wallet takes a really long time for it to sync up. Fortunately, there are alternatives that let you sync with a network.
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Board Beginners & Help
Re: Offering PayPal for Bitcoin? You're likely to be labeled a scammer - Read why
by
wonderbash
on 02/04/2013, 07:30:58 UTC
There have been an increasing number of posts from recently registered users requesting purchases of bitcoins with PayPal. While new users may indeed be enthusiastic about Bitcoin and be accustomed to using PayPal for prior purchases, this type of request is also exactly what scammers do to steal bitcoins.

Traditional payment networks (including PayPal) suffer inherent weaknesses:
  • Some payment fraud is unavoidable,
  • Completely non-reversible transactions are not possible; payment processors are involved in disputes,
  • Identity fraud and remote account takeover using stolen credentials are possible,
  • Payment processors can block funds and freeze accounts,
  • You must provide your credit card or account number to sites, which can be stolen by hackers to spend your money.

Bitcoin has none of these problems:
  • Confirmed Bitcoin payments are absolutely trustable,
  • Payments are non-reversible; money cannot be recalled by the sender,
  • Identity theft is a non-issue - payment recipients don't need validate the identity of buyers to trust their payment,
  • Nobody else can interfere with your Bitcoin balance or your ability to send or receive money,
  • You are in control of your money - when you send a payment, the recipient or hackers cannot make fraudulent withdraws from your wallet.

Why is it difficult to purchase Bitcoins with your old-fashioned money?

If this is the fault of Bitcoin, it is because Bitcoin is too good. If you receive a payment with Bitcoin, you can be 100% sure that the money is yours and it can't be disputed or taken back out of your wallet. Credit cards, ACH checking transfer and money wires, Chase Quickpay, PayPal, Dwolla, and most any other banking payments, however, can be reversed - they are less trustworthy than the Bitcoins you are trying to buy. The person offering to buy Bitcoins with PayPal may either dispute the payment with PayPal, reverse the payment through their credit card processor, or even may be using a hacked or stolen PayPal account.

This is why even Bitcoin exchanges have rigorous verification procedures - they need to verify your identity thoroughly, not because of Bitcoin, but because they are taking your government currency, transferred through banks and payment processors, which is fundamentally problematic. Exchanges that only deal with Bitcoin-based virtual currencies (such as Bitcoin to Namecoin) have no such identity requirements.

In addition, PayPal specifically disallows currency exchanges, and are Bitcoin-hostile. When you complain that you were ripped off, it's just as likely your account will be frozen.

Quote from: Paypal acceptable use agreement

Prohibited Activities

You may not use the PayPal service for activities that:

...

    relate to transactions that (a) show the personal information of third parties in violation of applicable law, (b) support pyramid or ponzi schemes, matrix programs, other "get rich quick" schemes or certain multi-level marketing programs, (c) are associated with purchases of annuities or lottery contracts, lay-away systems, off-shore banking or transactions to finance or refinance debts funded by a credit card, (d) are for the sale of certain items before the seller has control or possession of the item, (e) are by payment processors to collect payments on behalf of merchants, (f), are associated with the sale of traveler's checks or money orders, (h) involve currency exchanges or check cashing businesses, or (i) involve certain credit repair, debt settlement services, credit transactions or insurance activities.

So how can you obtain bitcoins, if nobody on the Internet can tell the difference between you and a foreign crime syndicate? If you don't wish to go through the lengthy verification procedures on exchanges, I recommend you first investigate local traders who are willing to exchange bitcoins in person. Sites such as https://localbitcoins.com/ or http://www.tradebitcoin.com/ may help you find local Bitcoin users. Also, Bitcoin is for commerce - sell something and accept Bitcoin!

So what is the best and safest way to purchase 20-30 Bitcoins? Tell me so I can go buy some. The way it is now it's like looking for Bitcoins in the black market because all the banks seem to have a conspiracy not to  work with you.

If you want to be really safe, go where most the bitcoins trade are: mtgox
or try localbitcoins and see if you have any seller around you. Good luck.
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Topic
Board Beginners & Help
Re: What are private keys?
by
wonderbash
on 02/04/2013, 07:21:44 UTC
A transaction is group of data that is broadcast to the network and recorded into blocks. It stores the information of some bitcoins flowing from one address to another new public key (address).
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Board Beginners & Help
Re: [WTB] 2 BTC - Newbie here Plz Help
by
wonderbash
on 01/04/2013, 19:18:36 UTC
It's hard to buy with paypal. If you really want to use paypal, make sure you don't get scam first by using a third party site, then the seller will probably want you to send it as paypal gift to avoid service fees and chargebacks. Good luck.
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Board Beginners & Help
Re: General question about mining
by
wonderbash
on 01/04/2013, 17:40:33 UTC
With GUIminer (graphic interface miner), you don't need to know all the underlying works that is going on. Just find a mining pool and register yourself as a worker, then input your login details into GUIminer and you can start mining right away. If bitcoin gets popular enough (it is already on it's way), people will start accepting and using it like paper money. Just as paper money, you don't need to understand how feds are printing and controlling the paper notes in order to use the paper money.
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Board Beginners & Help
Re: Bitcoins Returned from Tradehill?
by
wonderbash
on 01/04/2013, 13:14:37 UTC
If you sign up as business to "hear back" from them, they do send an automate mail requesting for more info from you. You can try and send some message back, but I am not sure if they will be replying it. Worth a try though.
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Topic
Board Beginners & Help
Re: What service, products you want to pay for bitcoins, online?
by
wonderbash
on 31/03/2013, 18:02:24 UTC
Would like to see it getting more popular and more company and services accepting them. Simply because of the no central authority part of the currency and how it has low transaction fee.
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Topic
Board Beginners & Help
Re: how long does it take to get paid
by
wonderbash
on 31/03/2013, 08:09:32 UTC
Pay for them? Buy low, sell high, rinse and repeat  Smiley
Or you may join a mining pool to get a more consistent payout instead of mining by yourself.