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Discuss what's fucking going on, and which programs are best and worst. One-time "program" announcements from "established" webmasters are allowed. |
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#51 | |
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It depends on the version of Windows/Linux/OSX you are running. After installing the Bitcoin software you can just use your computer's search function to find the file.
![]() To get up and running with Bitcoin (assuming you are processing for a paysite or something) you'll want a MyBitcoin (for the web-based processing piece) and you'll likely want the Bitcoin software from bitcoin.org too. (If you want to store your money on your own computer.) If you want me to elaborate and explain a simple setup for a paysite I can. ![]() After you have coins (from sales) you can either hold the coins and buy something with them (it's currency after all), or convert them back into dollars. Quote:
Currently, Bitcoins are not regulated by any government. Some governments don't even have laws that make you liable for taxes. I expect this to change quickly. In the US there is a vague law about 'stored money items' that appears to make a US Citizen liable for "Bitcoin taxes". Governments of the world can make Bitcoin illegal. Sure. But they can't block or stop it. Much in the same way that P2P file-sharing (bit torrent and the like) still work even though they are illegal. You could, of course, just move your website to a host in another country and keep accepting Bitcoin there is nothing they can do about it. They can't even tell you are receiving the coins. Bitcoin transaction are much like cash transactions in the real world. They are anonymous. Of course, I don't advocate breaking the laws in your country. But if you did, there is nothing they can do about it. Again I point to the copyright/file-sharing battle. Also, make no mistake: Bitcoin is no longer a hobbyist system with a few hundred users anymore. Over $100,000 USD's worth of Bitcoins change hands every day. There are $4.4 Million USD's worth of value in the system at any given time. I'd hardly call that a hobby. ![]() |
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#52 | |
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If your computer is holding your wallet.dat and it is hacked, you now have a duplicate wallet file "in the wild". It's like me making a copy of your credit card. If you catch the hack fast enough you can quickly spend all of your coins to another computer. This would make the other copy of your wallet.dat obsolete. ![]() |
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#53 | ||||
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The software is open source. You can audit every line of it before you install it if you want. ![]() Quote:
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#54 |
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Nothing.
![]() This will sound strange at first but a botnet actually strengthens the network. I'm serious. A "botnet miner" would initially cause a little bit of inflation until the network adjusted the mining difficulty. The miner would most likely sell the coins for dollars. This would increase the market capitalization of Bitcoin. ("More money in the system"). The additional crypto operations available to the network would strengthen the block chain (the ledger) from forgery or attack from other botnets. This is all in the Bitcoin whitepaper (PDF), as written by Satoshi Nakomoto. It's available on bitcoin.org |
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#55 | |
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Quote:
![]() What am I missing here?!? I, for one, like being able to sleep in really late, and start my work day at 10am. This is why I chose to be self-employed. So you're saying that to keep my funds safe from being hacked, I should fore-go the sleep I enjoy so much, so that I can quickly send all my funds to another user - if I get hacked?!? ![]() And for the record, no I am not being facetious here, I am really trying to understand how this works, and if it is something that I can integrate into my business. |
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#56 |
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the peer to peer may be a good sales point.
but coin mining is a poor substitute for DEPOSITS |
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#57 |
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Ok, one thing I'm trying to understand... the math problem that CPUs must solve is solely to decide (in a fair-ish way) who receives their "free" coins as more virtual currency gets released? It's not actually doing any useful work that a third party is paying real-world $ for?
Very interesting if this is the case, since it would initially have zero tangible value, this would only grow due to speculators exchanging it with a real-world currency... seems like a chicken and egg situation, but I guess if there's $4m worth floating around it must have worked. ![]() |
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#58 | ||
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Quote:
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If, in bizzaro-land, all of the exchangers were DDoS'd or beaten up and in hospital you could still mine coins into existence. |
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#59 | |||
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Quote:
![]() There are many solutions here. You can split your coins into many wallet.dat files and keep them on thumb drives. You can even print (yes, print) your coins to paper and put the pages in a safe deposit box. If you happen to trust me (I'm not saying that you should), you could even keep some of your Bitcoins over at MyBitcoin.com. In my previous statement I was just illustrating a unique way to make a copied wallet.dat file useless to an attacker. You can just spend them to another computer you control. Ie: your desktop to your laptop. ![]() Quote:
![]() "What if someone hacks your website and sends your joins to their processor?" etc etc Quote:
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#60 | |
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Quote:
so everyone mining their few 1000 coins a year is wasting their time since any large botnets could do 1,000,000 times that making their small computer made kitties worthless. A PDF document doesn't mean anything, last time I'm telling you coin mining is B/S. |
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#61 |
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#62 | ||
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It's completely decentralized. ![]() Quote:
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#63 | |
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#64 |
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I am an Internet Service Provider, and in my line of work, we deal with hacks and exploits all day long ...
The operative term is not "what if", but rather "when" ... hacks, exploits, and roots are up a staggering 40% over this time last year ... We no longer live in a cyber "what if" world ... cyber crime profits are snowballing, and attracting more and more people to the "business" every day, as they see how profitable it really is, with limited effort and even more limited risks .... I am just playing Devil's Advocate to how secure this system really is ... before I go investing my time into integrating it into my business model, only to find out later that it sounded much better in theory than in practicality ... thank you very much for your prompt answers! |
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#65 |
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The Bitcoin client is telling me "You should generate a new address every time you accept a payment." How am I supposed to integrate THAT into my website???
![]() I think you may be onto something here - but holy shit man - if its too complicated, only security extremists/alarmists will ever use it!! |
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#66 | ||||
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![]() Most businesses have operating capital (the money you use to service your debts), and other assets that are somewhat frozen. (The chair you are sitting on, the computers your business purchased, etc.) The same can be done with Bitcoin. The wallet on your local machine could contain your operating Bitcoin capital. You can "freeze" 1/2 or 2/3rds of it onto a encrypted thumbdrive, or print it to paper and store it in a safe. Optionally, you can just convert them into dollars again and hold the dollars if you are more comfortable with that. No one is forcing you to hold onto the Bitcoins. You can easily find someone who will eagerly buy them from you. ![]() Quote:
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#67 | |
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![]() Go to chainedgirls.com and try to buy one of the sets. That's a working example. |
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#68 |
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#69 |
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#70 |
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So are you telling me that his payment buttons dynamically create a new Bitcoin address every time they are used?? - Because I don't see that in the HTML code when I created a test button.
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#71 |
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How do you print paper money from the wallet.dat file? Just open it up in notepad?
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#72 |
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You're [EDITED]
A botnet is not going to STRENGTHEN the system. It's like me going to my bank and hacking $100,000,000 into my account and the bank paying out all the other clients 1/2 of what they used to have because they can only cover half the original assets the bank had. Don't believe me I'm sure I can buy 10,000,000 PCs CPU time for a week and try it. EDIT: anyway G/L, I won't start a flame war since you have to be diplomatic here.. and now I know a simple number crunching problem for my encyption time lock, brute force cracking encryptions.. too easy! oh wait ofcourse I already thought of that.... I need a number crunching problem that can't be attacked in parallel. Might be a solution to your botnet problem too! |
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#73 | |
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Check out the SCI toolkit. It's a set of PHP scripts to integrate your site with mybitcoin's processor. (The download link is at the bottom of mybitcoin.com's login screen.) It's not unlike PayPal's IPN or Liberty Reserve's SCI. You can optionally forward each payment as it happens to your local Bitcoin software client too. (As discussed before). No need to trust mybitcoin.com with your money. You can get a few Bitcoins to test everything with from this site: freebitcoins.appspot.com That's the "Bitcoin Faucet". That site will give away 0.05 Bitcoins for testing/playing around with for free. Since you are in Canada, you might also find this interesting: bitcoin2cc.com It's a site that will convert your Bitcoins into a pre-loaded virtual VISA card in CAD or USD. |
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#74 | |
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You can convert it, print it, stuff the paper into an envelope and put it in your safe deposit box. Years later, you can OCR it (with a scanner) and get your coins back again. ![]() P.S. Bitcoin is being developed for the mobile market too. Soon you'll be able to move them around from your mobile phone. The Nokia N900 can already run Bitcoin natively. And yes, the handset participates in the P2P network. A google employee recently ported Bitcoin to Java. So it's only a matter of time until Bitcoin will run on the BlackBerry. An iPhone port is also in the works. |
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#75 | |
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Either read the whitepaper or don't read it. It's your choice. I wish you all the best. No hard feelings.
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#76 |
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U need a number crunching problem that can't be attacked in parallel. Might be a solution to your botnet problem!
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#77 |
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#78 | |
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Quote:
So now I have BitCoin added to this week's TO-DO list, as well as buying SILVER ... My investment tip for the day, for anybody reading this, is RIGHT NOW is the time to jump on the silver bandwagon!! Silver and gold are both poised to jump significantly in value in as soon as TWO WEEKS -- and silver (currently just under $38. an ounce) is set to go as high as $150 (by conservative forecast models) or even $200 before the end of this year!! |
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#79 |
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#80 | |
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Quote:
![]() You can exchange any currency to bitcoins. Just like LibertyReserve, you cant exchange directly on their website, you have to go to a middleman.
__________________
Free 🅑🅘🅣🅒🅞🅘🅝🅢 Every Hour (Yes, really. Free ₿itCoins.) (Signup with ONLY your Email and Password. You can also refer people and get even more.) |
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#81 | |
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Yeh I've read your explanation. WHO CARES ABOUT A LITTLE INFLATION Have it your way, I'll look around for some botnets for rent... |
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#82 |
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It's not really a problem either way.
You can inflate the currency slightly for a while and either sell or destroy the coins. The first option increases the market capitalization and will temporarily drive the price down (more supply), the latter does nothing but waste your time and money. Have fun! Be sure to let us know how it goes! ![]() |
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#83 |
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Just like people haven't tried it before...
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#84 |
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So if you destroy coins at will then there is no real distributed impervious system afterall!
No different to using paypal. The transaction can be halted by other people |
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#85 |
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#86 |
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You misunderstood me.
I was referring to your little botnet. If you used a botnet to mine coins and then just threw them away. It would do nothing. It wouldn't inflate the supply or cause anyone any grief at all. In the long run you'd cause a tiny bit of deflation. Probably less than 0.01%. It isn't even noticeable. If you sold these coins (most likely, why would you work for free?), you'd cause a temporary decline in the asking price of the coins because you'd flood the market with supply. This would only work until the difficulty increased automatically. Again, this really does nothing. You just *helped* us mine more coins! Thanks! lol You don't get it. Cracking the crypto is how Bitcoin works. By attacking it you are actually helping it. ![]() ![]() |
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#87 | |
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Quote:
![]() Or what do you mean? It does only take a couple of seconds to complete the transfer. It's not like downloading gay movies in 1080p.
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#88 |
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Approximately how long should a transfer take to complete?
I sent the 0.05 BTC balance I had at MyBitcoin.com to my wallet - about 35 minutes ago, and they still have not shown up in my wallet? |
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#89 |
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Edit: Oh, I totally misunderstood.
The first time you install the Bitcoin software you need to sync up with the P2P network. Your client should say "Block 116,642" or more. The blocks increment every so often. If your client is out of sync it will download the missing blocks automatically. You can see the current block count @ bitcoinwatch.com. You only have to sync your client when you first install it. It's not a bug. The "blocks" are containers that have transactions inside of them. If you did a spend from MyBitcoin to your PC you won't see it unless your client is in sync with the rest of the network. FYI: You can view the contents of these blocks by going to blockexplorer.com |
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#90 |
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ok thanx .... I'm at 95'000 blocks so far
I'll wait for it to sync. |
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#91 |
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How can a system where the honest users earns 1 credit per X hours and a botnet owner earns 10,000,000 credits per X hours be fair?
How many computers are using brute force at once? According to your 0.01% figure you already have 100,000,000,000 members? 100 accounts for every Chinaman! |
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#92 |
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And no a botnet doesn't HELP your currency.
You decide the difficulty level of the encryption, so if MORE CREDITS helps you some way botnets can't do it |
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#93 | |
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It's super technical stuff. It's covered in the whitepaper if you are interested in knowing more about how the system keeps track of the transactions. ;) It's brilliant in my opinion. ![]() |
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#94 | |
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__________________
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#95 |
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#96 |
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#97 |
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#98 |
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#99 |
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#100 | |
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__________________
Free 🅑🅘🅣🅒🅞🅘🅝🅢 Every Hour (Yes, really. Free ₿itCoins.) (Signup with ONLY your Email and Password. You can also refer people and get even more.) |
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