cram it
― frogbs, Thursday, 21 November 2013 17:49 (twelve years ago)
these things hit $900 the other day????????
wtf.
gimme the bitcoins.
― sleepingbag, Thursday, 21 November 2013 17:49 (twelve years ago)
xp frogs it easily can be true since bitcoins have been going up, it could also be true in a bear market but that would be a better trick
― lag∞n, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:16 (twelve years ago)
i wonder how many bitcoins d34thdr0ne3 has
― ᶓ͠סּᴥ͠סּᶔ ᶓͼ᷆ₓͼ᷇ᶔ (gr8080), Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:21 (twelve years ago)
he keeps them in a cigar box
― lag∞n, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:23 (twelve years ago)
frogs it easily can be true since bitcoins have been going up, it could also be true in a bear market but that would be a better trick
I don't doubt the fact that you can make money that way but rather the idea that this hasn't reached bitcoin-mining levels of inefficiency a long time ago. If he's making "thousands of dollars" running one script surely there are thousands of others running similar ones?
― frogbs, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:45 (twelve years ago)
sure but instead of running a script he could just buy bitcoins and that would work to, making money in a bull market is easy
― lag∞n, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:46 (twelve years ago)
Frogs if what he's doing is taking advantage of price differences between the exchanges then yes it is possible and in fact there is literally trillions of dollars invested in the practice at this moment
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbitrage
― 乒乓, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:49 (twelve years ago)
It requires a lot of capital to really be worth it though and he is at the risk of having his entire position wiped out by either 1) an error in his script or 2) the freefall nature of speculative investments
― 乒乓, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:51 (twelve years ago)
it sounds like it's more just working off the wild fluctuations in pricing and probably what makes it viable is a completely unregulated trading market without (significant) transaction fees, i'm guessing
― sleepingbag, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:52 (twelve years ago)
Transaction fees would be hindrance, for sure
The other possibility is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-frequency_trading
― 乒乓, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:53 (twelve years ago)
yeah it could be arbitrage (I used to do a similar thing in sportsbetting and yeah you can accidently go broke quick) but he also claims he didn't invest anything into it, something seems odd about it
still this stuff is pretty fascinating. A complete crash seems inevitable at some point. The potential for fraud is through the roof with these things.
― frogbs, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:55 (twelve years ago)
so many tech 3.0 services are basically crowdsourced versions of existing things without any sort of regulations protections or oversight at all
― sleepingbag, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:57 (twelve years ago)
Could be he's using other people's money. Have you checked your bank account recently xp
― 乒乓, Thursday, 21 November 2013 18:58 (twelve years ago)
someone just moved $147m in BC
https://blockchain.info/tx/1c12443203a48f42cdf7b1acee5b4b1c1fedc144cb909a3bf5edbffafb0cd204
― ᶓ͠סּᴥ͠סּᶔ ᶓͼ᷆ₓͼ᷇ᶔ (gr8080), Friday, 22 November 2013 18:44 (twelve years ago)
me irl
― lag∞n, Friday, 22 November 2013 18:45 (twelve years ago)
someone linked to an article yesterday where the headline was "Bitcoin: The Segway of Currencies" lol
― flopson, Friday, 22 November 2013 19:18 (twelve years ago)
http://i.imgur.com/rhJYFVq.jpg
― 乒乓, Saturday, 23 November 2013 18:49 (twelve years ago)
^^ overstates condom effectiveness
― Aimless, Saturday, 23 November 2013 18:51 (twelve years ago)
http://bitcoincharts.com/charts/chart.png?width=940&m=mtgoxUSD&SubmitButton=Draw&r=60&i=&c=0&s=&e=&Prev=&Next=&t=S&b=&a1=&m1=10&a2=&m2=25&x=0&i1=&i2=&i3=&i4=&v=1&cv=0&ps=0&l=0&p=0&
― William Brosinski (rip van wanko), Saturday, 23 November 2013 19:13 (twelve years ago)
researchers positing a dpr/satoshi connection!
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/11/23/study-suggests-link-between-dread-pirate-roberts-and-satoshi-nakamoto
― lag∞n, Sunday, 24 November 2013 18:34 (twelve years ago)
alex winter
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/alexwinter/deep-web-the-untold-story-of-bitcoin-and-the-silk
― am0n, Monday, 25 November 2013 19:12 (twelve years ago)
party on
― lag∞n, Monday, 25 November 2013 19:15 (twelve years ago)
from circle k to circle b
― am0n, Monday, 25 November 2013 19:23 (twelve years ago)
i'd watch that
― frogbs, Monday, 25 November 2013 19:30 (twelve years ago)
frogⒷs
― am0n, Monday, 25 November 2013 19:42 (twelve years ago)
http://i.imgur.com/o3BbZI4.png
― 乓乒 (gr8080), Tuesday, 26 November 2013 01:25 (twelve years ago)
Researchers Retract Claim Of Link Between Alleged Silk Road Mastermind And Founder Of Bitcoin
http://www.businessinsider.com/silk-road-satoshi-paper-retraction-2013-11
dang
― lag∞n, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 03:48 (twelve years ago)
just hit $1000, wow
― frogbs, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 15:20 (twelve years ago)
that buys a lot of subway
― Roberto Spiralli, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 15:23 (twelve years ago)
Bitcoin is over fwiw. I'm all in on Litecoin
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 15:30 (twelve years ago)
serious question. if I wanted to say, buy one bitcoin and then sell it a day later, how long before I'd see any actual cash? how much would I lose in transaction fees? is such a thing even possible in the U.S. without some major hoop jumping right now?
― frogbs, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 15:48 (twelve years ago)
frogbs I'm gonna say that this week is your lucky week. All the details are here
http://blog.coinbase.com/post/68147862129/coinbase-to-waive-all-fees-on-11-29-13-in-support-of
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 15:49 (twelve years ago)
But I have a better way. Just paypal me the money you wanna spend at ilxbitcoinexcha✧✧✧@gm✧✧✧.c✧✧ and I'll take care of everything for you. Remember to tell me how many bitcoins you wanna buy
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 15:51 (twelve years ago)
hit up my etsy storefront if you are SERIOUSLY interested in buying bitcoin no time wasters
― Roberto Spiralli, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 15:53 (twelve years ago)
i'm not interested. i'm just curious if it's even possible. from what I've read it seems like someone who bought it at $20 and now wanted to sell would have a very difficult time of doing so. like it would almost be easier to just blow it all on drugs and then sell those.
― frogbs, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 16:36 (twelve years ago)
Yeah I really have to question how much liquidity there actually is on the market
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 16:39 (twelve years ago)
right. like half the stories on ycombinator are "this has taken 3 weeks and I needed to give a ton of sensitive information" and the other half are "I got hacked and lost it all"
― frogbs, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 16:41 (twelve years ago)
― 乒乓, Wednesday, November 27, 2013 8:30 AM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i was getting all bitcoin jealous yesterday and started to look at litecoin but couldn't figure out how to buy them, anyway they were $18 yesterday and now they're $29 today
― sleepingbag, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 18:03 (twelve years ago)
http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2013/nov/27/hard-drive-bitcoin-landfill-site
http://replygif.net/i/1049.gif
― am0n, Wednesday, 27 November 2013 18:22 (twelve years ago)
http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/1r88vl/need_advice_on_inheritance_arbitrage_family_etc/
― 乒乓, Thursday, 28 November 2013 19:08 (twelve years ago)
http://www.reddit.com/r/SheepMarketplace/comments/1ru5ir/founda_wallet_containing_98million_worth_of_coins/
― 乒乓, Sunday, 1 December 2013 19:52 (twelve years ago)
http://www.reddit.com/r/SheepMarketplace/
Lol Bitcoin users who used this service just got scammed out of all their bitcoins
― 乒乓, Sunday, 1 December 2013 19:53 (twelve years ago)
loll the benefits of anonymous currency
― lag∞n, Sunday, 1 December 2013 20:36 (twelve years ago)
every private/public key just leaked
http://directory.io/
― frogbs, Sunday, 1 December 2013 21:20 (twelve years ago)
dunno if that means anything considering the insane amount of data this is but lol
what does that actually mean
― socki (s1ocki), Monday, 2 December 2013 02:32 (twelve years ago)
I don't really understand this too well but I think that each 'wallet' has a public key, of which there is a finite number available. One of the flaws in bitcoin is that two people could theoretically be assigned the same public key, in which case you could gain access to all the other guy's coins (and vice versa). There are so many public keys out there that this should pretty much never happen. Anyway apparently someone cracked the algorithm that generates the private keys and put up this website which matches up every potential public key to its private key, which is kinda useless since only like 0.00000001% of those keys contain any actual bitcoin. That said obviously all these pages here are only generated upon request which means that people who look up their own keys 'generate' the page which someone else can take to mean that money actually exists somewhere on that page.
― frogbs, Monday, 2 December 2013 14:20 (twelve years ago)
does it mean that someone can look up someone else's public key, get their private key, and do something nefarious wiht it?
― socki (s1ocki), Monday, 2 December 2013 15:15 (twelve years ago)
I guess I don't really know but it sounds that way? I don't think 'public' keys are supposed to be truly public. Then again isn't there a fairly public transaction record that contains this data??
― frogbs, Monday, 2 December 2013 16:02 (twelve years ago)