The price of BitCoins doubled in less than a month?
Sounds like a bubble.
haha I predict the first bitcoin financial crisis followed by quantitative easing
To me this looks like a scam:
*you don't know what you crunch for them (distribution of viruses via a zombie network maybe??)
*I bet cheating is easy
*the only reason for crunching is for "money" which doesn't expire, but could be worth 0.00$ once the initial interest has gone
*the things you can trade for your coins look strange, just look at this section: https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Trade#Psychoactive_drugs I wouldn't want to get involved in this
I don't believe in this, there have been other DC platforms offering real money in the past, but it was never profitable, it didn't even cover the costs of creating "money"
apparently so... all by Rezin77This has been hashed out on many forums already.
Bitcoin is a revolutionary currency designed from the ground up by a genius. Don't be so quick to mock it, you just might learn something new and exciting.
I'm confused. Whats actually being processed when you run the application?
I like the arguments that amount to, "I don't understand, so it's stupid."
Steve Gibson does a fair job of explaining it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQPSwA2Itbs
You want stats to stroke your ego?
Bitcoin current network strength: 13.504 petaflops in less than a year.
You want a science experiment?
Can a decentralized crypto-currency give the power of money back to the people?
...
And yes, these are the words of a genius.
...
But forget his words. Look at the code and decide for yourself.
But whatever, it's all a joke or a scam. I won't bother you here anymore.
I like the arguments that amount to, "I don't understand, so it's stupid."
I won't bother you here anymore.
It's a bit like a Ponzi Scheme: the early adopters make the money and late adopters don't.
When money is involved, some people do a lot of fishy things. That is why I like banks - because they have regulations what they can do and what they can not do.
Also, the ability to change your public key at any time, so nobody can track your transactions, allows him to use a second key until he switches back to his original public key to redeem the bitcoins. Until that point, nobody connects him to the first key.
It's a scam!
apparently you are calling us stupid...
Of your current six post, five of them were on this thread alone.
since you've said you had an account before but lost your password.. you should still be able to link to your old profile.. please do so that we can verify the legitimacy of at least that.
Absolutely, yes. Look up Bernie Madoff as an example of how easy it is to separate people from their money when you appeal to their sense of greed (as Bitcoin is doing).A ponzi scheme involves fraud. There is no fraud in Bitcoin. Do you think 13 petaflops worth of miners are all so easily deceived?
You realize that your tin foil hat is slipping, right?Yeah, the fishy things are being done by the central banks. You like inflation hhmmm? You realize it's theft right?
Only because it's a VERY common theme for people to create new accounts here and post repeatedly about some "wonderful, new, amazing" scam.Does it really matter who I am? The validity of a post should come from the content, not the identity of the poster.
How can the generation of fake currency change the future? Currency only has value if other people (with their own currrency/value to back them) say that it has value. If Europe and Asia were to suddenly decide that the U.S. Dollar had no value, then it would immediately have little to no value. Bitcoins currently only have value because a few people think it's a fun idea. They have no real value outside of the group of people who are running the project.The reason I want to spread Bitcoin is I personally feel it can lead to great things. Freedom of money is something that doesn't exist in today's world. It is controlled by a small percentage of people, if we can change this, we can change the future.
So unless you get free power or have hundreds (or thousands) of computers, don't bother.Mining is not a get rich quick scheme. It will eventually only be profitable to two groups: the most efficient miners, or those that don't pay for electricity. The reason it's profitable for so many now is because Bitcoin is new and it's experiencing rapid growth.
This is an excellent example of what happens when greedy people and the possibility of money are involved. Those with the power to do so, do their best to take control. Everyone else is excluded. Which is exactly what you say the project is trying to eliminate in the rest of the world. If it can't be stopped inside the Bitcoin project, how can the project possibly end the practice by those who deal with the real money?A thread was posted at Overclockers.net and most of the new people joined an already large pool. There is an attack on the network that can occur if an individual, or group of individuals, has a majority of the network hashing power.
What stops that one person from taking all of the profits of the entire group when they decide that the profit is big enough (or drying up)? See Rudy's comment about Ponzi schemes..A pool is, for all practical purposes, many people contributing their hashing power to one Bitcoin client. That client is controlled by one person.
You realize that your tin foil hat is slipping, right?
How can the generation of fake currency change the future? Currency only has value if other people (with their own currrency/value to back them) say that it has value. If Europe and Asia were to suddenly decide that the U.S. Dollar had no value, then it would immediately have little to no value. Bitcoins currently only have value because a few people think it's a fun idea. They have no real value outside of the group of people who are running the project.
So unless you get free power or have hundreds (or thousands) of computers, don't bother.
This is an excellent example of what happens when greedy people and the possibility of money are involved. Those with the power to do so, do their best to take control. Everyone else is excluded. Which is exactly what you say the project is trying to eliminate in the rest of the world. If it can't be stopped inside the Bitcoin project, how can the project possibly end the practice by those who deal with the real money?
What stops that one person from taking all of the profits of the entire group when they decide that the profit is big enough (or drying up)? See Rudy's comment about Ponzi schemes..
You know, I get the whole "Oh neat I can "fold" and get money for it" but this whole "Power to the people, viva la bitcoin!" sentiment is just silly. This whole "planned obsolescence" deflation as the coins reach their static limit and then are slowly lost over time and the transition to "decimal" coins is absurd. All it takes is one hoarder, one lost-then-found cache, one crack and everything is thrown to the wind. Until the point when the coin limit is reached, I could see it surviving, but a deflationary currency is doomed.
In the "myth" section of their wiki their one 'fear' is one group/entity amassing too much processing power and therefore too much of the currency. But as soon as the point in time is reached when the absolute number of coins begins to decrease, the chance of "someone" amassing "too much" wealth increases to no end.
Also, I could be mistaken but it almost seems like the "wallet" file that stored your coins is nothing more than a plaintext file by default?
And according to the wiki they can only be spent once?
You said yourself that the group from Overclockers.net was causing problems with the system because they teamed up together to make a large pool of computers.Your argument is: Greedy people are greedy, let's not try something new. They aren't taking control by any means. It's difficult to explain why because you don't really have a firm grasp on how Bitcoin works. As I said, if someone gains control of over half the network power (7 petaflops), they can hurt the network. This doesn't mean there is no response to such an attack.
In order to have any chance at getting coins, you recommended that people team up together with one person managing the pool. Let's say I'm the person managing the pool and I decide to take all of the coins from the pool and sell them and run. Too bad for you and everyone else in my pool... That's EXACTLY like a Ponzi scheme and I can pretty much guarantee you that if it has not happened already it will certainly happen some time in the near future.Please elaborate. Taking all of the profits? Do you mean a person holding many Bitcoins sells all of their Bitcoins, pushing the exchange rate down? I don't have a problem with this, that is a free market at work. Yes, there is risk in a free market, I never said there wasn't. What I'm saying is there is no fraud. A Ponzi scheme is someone guaranteeing profit from an investment. There is no guarantee of anything with Bitcoins. As you said, if people find value in them, they will go up in value, and vice versa.
You said yourself that the group from Overclockers.net was causing problems with the system because they teamed up together to make a large pool of computers.
In order to have any chance at getting coins, you recommended that people team up together with one person managing the pool. Let's say I'm the person managing the pool and I decide to take all of the coins from the pool and sell them and run. Too bad for you and everyone else in my pool... That's EXACTLY like a Ponzi scheme and I can pretty much guarantee you that if it has not happened already it will certainly happen some time in the near future.
Well if all you GPGPU people are hating on bitcoin, if you decide to get rid of your 58xx series cards, I'd gladly take them off your hands to continued to be defrauded as apart of this ponzi scheme.
- I don't understand this!Convincing more people to mine Bitcoins goes against my best interests
Well, I just don't understand ... who says we are "hating" bitcoin? Nobody at all! Many of us just don't trust the scheme and program. Trust is the basis of all commerce. Lack of trust is not equal to "hating", it is a basis of not taking part.
No program or scheme is worth hating (unless you loose a lot). I would not expend that energy.
What i am thinking is: Why do some posters want us to take part so much? Why not accept our "no" and leave it? Why is it so important to recruit more people when Rezin777 states:
- I don't understand this!
There must be some reason for this persistence. Could it be that those in the bitcoin program need the growth to make a gain? And that possibly at our costs? I don't trust any program which relies on recruiting more and more people because this reminds me of the pyramid-scheme, where the people at the bottom pay all and gain nothing.