Thursday 31 December 2015

They think Satoshi was wrong


I've been really perplexed by the Bitcoin Core developers' positions lately, specifically wrt to a fork (or hard-fork as they call it.) They seem in stark contrast to my understanding of the system. Today I think I finally understand the issue and would like to point it out in the hopes of alleviating the confusion of others.Apparently, the Core developers are operating under a not-often-spoken assumption that Satoshi was in fact wrong (about several things but specifically) about the issue of whether or not CPU power was meant to govern the Bitcoin system.I take quotes from the white paper to illustrate why I think that was his intention:The proof-of-work also solves the problem of determining representation in majority decision making. If the majority were based on one-IP-address-one-vote, it could be subverted by anyone able to allocate many IPs. Proof-of-work is essentially one-CPU- one-vote. The majority decision is represented by the longest chain, which has the greatest proof-of-work effort invested in it.and:Nodes can leave and rejoin the network at will, accepting the proof-of-work chain as proof of what happened while they were gone. They vote with their CPU power, expressing their acceptance of valid blocks by working on extending them and rejecting invalid blocks by refusing to work on them. Any needed rules and incentives can be enforced with this consensus mechanism.This makes sense to me. The point of the system is to eliminate the need for trust. The only trust required is that "honest nodes collectively control more CPU power than any cooperating group of attacker nodes." At least, that's always been my interpretation which I'm willing to concede is flawed if I can be convinced.Now how I discovered the aforementioned assumption. These are IRC logs from #bitcoin-wizards today:adlai Guest2324: so, consensus in that quote refers to consensus over state, within a set of rules. the rules don't change, because you wouldn't know who to trust about which changes are good or bad.adam3us Guest1234: it is a subtle point but actually it is the economically dependent full nodes that enforce consensus rules not miners; miners follow.kanzure he was wrong. it turns out it's not about CPU power at all.maaku Guest2324: satoshi was clueless about tons of shitThe above parties (with the possible exception of "adlai") were signers of the capacity roadmap letter. Now it makes perfect sense to me. They think Satoshi was wrong about the system so we have a fundamental disagreement. That's why it looks as if we will never be able to reconcile our mutually exclusive positions on the matter.Hope this helps others. via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1Rcw1zM

Just changed my trezor's homescreen with the new beta.mytrezor.com - it looks awesome! (the Bitcoin Embassy's logo)


http://bit.ly/1NYa03i via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1NYa1nR

Segregated Witness BIP (Draft)

http://bit.ly/1RTjEKv

Submitted January 01, 2016 at 02:50AM by eragmus http://bit.ly/1TsqSmh

Accept It: The Blockchain Will Be Part of Your Bank's Business


http://bit.ly/1SoYbIF via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1P3CJn4

DMD and Cryptsy


In order to get their BCT off of Cryptsy a lot of people are buying DMD on Cryptsy and selling it on Bittrex or Cryptopia. That is totally cool, but if you are looking for cheap DMD please don't buy it on Cryptsy. It is at least 20% cheaper on other exchanges. via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1OzD0nJ

Happy new year bitcoiners!


Wishing everybody in bitcoin land a happy, healthy and prosperous new year. We are all part of the evolution of finance into a fair and free, global financial system for all. Keep up the great work in 2016! via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1UiRdU9

Best Investments of 2015 The Winners Are: Bitcoin And Cash


http://bit.ly/1VsMhgL via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1R0YMAV

Optimal Fee Strategies for Miners by Gavin Andresen


http://bit.ly/1mmyFI8 via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1P3tV0C

My name is nefzawi to be done with a lot and the other use.


Come back from clash of clans not be sure if we are the way we via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1msys5H

Will 2016 be A Banner Year for Bitcoin?

http://bit.ly/1ml9y8H

Submitted December 31, 2015 at 09:20PM by vlarocca http://bit.ly/1TrXsF5

2015 Bitcoin Year in Review

http://bit.ly/1TsfBm0

Submitted January 01, 2016 at 12:12AM by goodharbor http://bit.ly/1JhOgT8

These 8 Companies Strengthened Bitcoin’s Infrastructure in 2015


http://bit.ly/1MJqUAV via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1mmgimI

Transaction volume just spiked at blockchain.info

http://bit.ly/22zZSYq

Submitted December 31, 2015 at 04:08PM by erkzewbc http://bit.ly/1mrk0Le

Segregated Witness BIP (Draft)


http://bit.ly/1RTjEKv via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1TsqSmh

Circle goes full mainstream and takes out a instagram add

http://bit.ly/1mTtIGA

Submitted December 31, 2015 at 10:39PM by FargoBTC http://bit.ly/1kwjR83

5 Bitcoin and Blockchain Startups to Watch in 2016

http://bit.ly/1ZChNuY

Submitted December 31, 2015 at 04:16AM by champbronc2 http://bit.ly/1Olhnpb

Nasdaq makes first share trade using blockchain technology

http://bit.ly/1IGa76S

Submitted December 31, 2015 at 10:13PM by olliec420 http://bit.ly/1kw7tov

Michael Burry, Real-Life Market Genius From The Big Short, Thinks Another Financial Crisis Is Looming

http://nym.ag/1PzojxW

Submitted December 31, 2015 at 09:45PM by flix2 http://bit.ly/1SoiwxU

What (crypto?) currency based upon data does not require mining ?


Help requested: I am searching for something along the lines of DataCoin (which appears to have died) but I am not convinced such a scheme requires a 'mining' basis. Data submitted require coin for initial storage and coin for access, encryption should be (somehow) automagickly based upon the source of the data and some other required factors. I am neither scrooge nor a leech nor any kind of wealthy, so for the best answer arising from all this over the next 72 hours I make sure you have an LTC address I can donate to. Why: I have an urgent need to store massive quantities of real data which many people will need to be able to access. This requires the idea of locking it into a distributed decentralized network of nodes (not carrying any other type of data) so that it can be accessed on the fly by the payment of such coin. Whatever the coin, it must be able to withstand any duplication/forgery attacks, and I recognize this may be where mining is required - please explain if I am getting this correctly. I regard mining as 'make-work'. Otherwise, what I am looking for looks like this: 1 - agent writes data into the master dataset - encrypted 2 - agent pays to store the data - the coin gets distributed to those nodes storing the data. 3 - customer searching for data in a master data index discovers the data required and pays coin to the nodes which are storing the data, the nodes download the encrypted data. The key for decryption is stored on a separate node, also keyed by the coin payment to be released in settlement. [data nodes have no way to decrypt the data they store, any encryption nodes do not know which data is held for which keys they store, or something along these lines] This is expected to occur multiple times for any given datarecord but may also never occur (luck). [I originally considered just using LTC payments for an independent database storing records, but with all the references to such a concept embedded in a cryptocurrency it seems only prudent to simply ask...] via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1OnjM2r

David Andolfatto, VP of St Louis Federal Reserve Bank suggests issuing a competitor to Bitcoin called Fedcoin in detailed Opinion Column on Newsweek.


http://bit.ly/1Pzj3w7 via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1NUGaiq

Hey /r/bitcoin let's help make it happen! The ChangeTip #SocialGiving Challenge - give a warm meal for just $1.95 (the goal is $2000 by New Years Eve, they are still short as of now)

http://bit.ly/1NU70qL

Submitted December 31, 2015 at 07:30PM by supah http://bit.ly/1NU72Px

Nasdaq’s Blockchain-Based Linq Issues Chain Shares


http://bit.ly/1On5peL via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1JLNgBT

2015 Bitcoin Year in Review


http://bit.ly/1TsfBm0 via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1JhOgT8

Meanwhile, back at the ranch Pieter Wuille is putting the final touches to the Segregated Witness test network.

http://bit.ly/1MIwDH6

Submitted December 31, 2015 at 09:29PM by mmeijeri http://bit.ly/1Soa81d

Circle goes full mainstream and takes out a instagram add


http://bit.ly/1mTtIGA via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1kwjR83

Mining to Purchase Items

Does anyone buy miners in order to purchase things instead of just trying to turn a profit? Ex: if you purchase X product every month and have a miner that can produce the btc for you instead of having to buy the coins from someone else. I'm trying to decide which makes more sense, mining my own then selling the miner later for probably a net 0. Or just purchasing product for a net less.



Submitted December 31, 2015 at 10:33PM by RuffledFeathers411 http://bit.ly/1MIBbNI

Take a Chance on Cryptocurrency


http://bit.ly/1Ui92CP via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1SomCWR

Will the Halving Drive Bitcoin Price to New Highs?


http://bit.ly/1YRiFiv via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1P2qib6

Michael Burry, Real-Life Market Genius From The Big Short, Thinks Another Financial Crisis Is Looming


http://nym.ag/1PzojxW via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1SoiwxU

December Sees Bitcoin Reach 100 Million Transactions


http://bit.ly/1Vs0qL9 via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1YRaYsy

Nasdaq makes first share trade using blockchain technology


http://bit.ly/1IGa76S via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1kw7tov

Will 2016 be A Banner Year for Bitcoin?


http://bit.ly/1ml9y8H via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1TrXsF5

Another double digit difficulty increase, the last of 2015, 11.16%

Finally at 100+ billion difficulty and 743,604,444 GH/s

At the current rate we will be at 1 EH/s in February

Halving countdown: 200 days



Submitted December 31, 2015 at 07:14PM by keystrike http://bit.ly/1kvEXTP

Meanwhile, back at the ranch Pieter Wuille is putting the final touches to the Segregated Witness test network.


http://bit.ly/1MIwDH6 via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1Soa81d

Hack


http://bit.ly/1JLkmBR via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1IG3Bgq

Uphold partners with UnionPay to tap into China's $7 trillion bank card market


http://bit.ly/1JLkmBM via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1IG3Bgn

Mining Farm Vacancy Offered By Bitbank in Inner Mongolia


Bitbank is now offering space for miners in its 50 mega watt Inner Mongolia facility (Photos below)The only fee that will be charged will be is an electricity fee of 0.45 CNY/KWhBitbank will provide a standard enterprise invoiceThis facility has the support of the local government in Ordos.This facility has 100M InternetLocation: Ordos, Inner MongoliaMiners not includedFor details please contact: Virgilio@bitbank.comhttp://imgur.com/a/YCgaB via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1PzeVdC

Cyber•Rating: Crypto Property evaluation paper and PoC


Hi guys. I'd like to share a paper draft and a corresponding PoC implementation of what I am working on.tldr:Paper: http://bit.ly/1YQWMzM implementation: http://bit.ly/1YU4q7g (sortable by rating).Here are 2 reasons why I need such a thing:Coinmarketcap sucks for me. Superficial methodology of cap calculation, proprietary software, almost absence of due diligence for markets and systems, no transactional analytics. That is definitely not the information I would like to rely on my investment road.. I believe it could be done better.I expect explosion of high quality investment opportunities due to developments of Ethereum, BitShares and Sidechains . Basic idea behind cyber•Rating is to gather all meaningful cryptoproperty regardless of underlying technology. Think of it like S&P of blockchains. But S&P is not just a rating. It rely on IFRS or GAAP. So when I started to work on rating I stuck with an issue of comparable reporting and criteria. I came to exciting conclusions that could become foundations for the Internet of things, values, chains and everything.In a paper I discuss design of a proposed system. All reporting logic is based on a foundations mostly has been built by BitShares. Paper is a draft and is not published yet. A document is editable by anybody.PoC implementation in fact does not implement blockchain reporting yet and this is an issue for the next year. But even now it show very interesting non opinionated results that are far better than Coingecko.Christmas Bonus: http://bit.ly/1YQWNnd contain very interesting CMGR indicator that you wont find anywhere. We've audited all historical data for all blockchains that allow to calculate Compound Monthly Growth Rate. It like CAGR but monthly. It is recalculated real time. Enjoy! via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1YU4q7h

The most influential headlines of 2015; in case you missed one


http://bit.ly/1YQWMzJ via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1YU4q7e

Mutual Aid Society on a Blockchain by Dan Larimer (bytemaster)


http://bit.ly/1YQWMzC via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1YU4pQI

What is a confirmation?


http://bit.ly/1OmFSlV via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1OuklTQ

Hey /r/bitcoin let's help make it happen! The ChangeTip #SocialGiving Challenge - give a warm meal for just $1.95 (the goal is $2000 by New Years Eve, they are still short as of now)


http://bit.ly/1NU70qL via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1NU72Px

Any examples of the "10 minute script" that's a theoretical danger in 2mb blocks?

On the bitcoin.org Capacity Increases FAQ, it states that one of the reasons not to have larger blocks is that

it’s possible to construct a transaction that takes up almost 1MB of space and which takes 30 seconds or more to validate on a modern computer (blocks containing such transactions have been mined). In 2MB blocks, a 2MB transaction can be constructed that may take over 10 minutes to validate which opens up dangerous denial-of-service attack vectors. Other lines of code would need to be changed to prevent these problems.

Does anyone know more about this?

Specifically, is there any examples of a single 1mb transaction that takes 30 seconds (or an example 2mb transaction). The FAQ says transactions like these have been mined. Does anyone have any links to those transactions for examination?

I'm trying to understand how a transaction can be so complex that it could do this, like how many inputs it would take, how many outputs, what sized fee it would require, etc.

Next time XT does large block testing on the TestNet, would anyone be able to use that to test a large script like this?

Seems like it's an opportunity to profile the processing subroutines to figure out optimizations and test simple mempool policies to prevent this from occurring.



Submitted December 31, 2015 at 08:18AM by DeftNerd http://bit.ly/1mSNrGy

Another double digit difficulty increase, the last of 2015, 11.16%


Finally at 100+ billion difficulty and 743,604,444 GH/sAt the current rate we will be at 1 EH/s in FebruaryHalving countdown: 200 days via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1kvEXTP

Devs are strongly against increasing the blocksize because it will increase mining centralization (among other things). But mining is already unacceptably centralized. Why don't we see an equally strong response to fix this situation (with proposed solutions) since what they fear is already here?

Am I missing something simple?



Submitted December 31, 2015 at 01:03PM by Bubbles_o0O http://bit.ly/1mqVIAS

A Concise Review รข€“ Bitcoin Legality In The Russian Federation


http://bit.ly/1SnOFpb via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1ZDgMmr

ZRC @ MaxMiners.Net


http://bit.ly/1SnOFpa via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1ZDgKel

Transaction volume just spiked at blockchain.info


http://bit.ly/22zZSYq via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1mrk0Le

Problems for XT if Core becomes a major altcoin


http://bit.ly/1R0geFI via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1NTK4rF

What's Your favorite way to store bitcoin?


I realize many have multiple wallets, including myself. I personally use a blockchain wallet on my phone, and transfer from hard wallets when possible. The problem that arises here, is that blockchain isn't that friendly when it comes to getting bitcoin off the paper wallet. That is the scanning and verification keys are not "user-friendly"But I was wondering how people store their bitcoins? What programs/apps/websites do you prefer? I honestly don't feel safe enough using blockchain wallets anymore, imho. via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1IFzLIR

Wednesday 30 December 2015

Any examples of the "10 minute script" that's a theoretical danger in 2mb blocks?


On the bitcoin.org Capacity Increases FAQ, it states that one of the reasons not to have larger blocks is thatit’s possible to construct a transaction that takes up almost 1MB of space and which takes 30 seconds or more to validate on a modern computer (blocks containing such transactions have been mined). In 2MB blocks, a 2MB transaction can be constructed that may take over 10 minutes to validate which opens up dangerous denial-of-service attack vectors. Other lines of code would need to be changed to prevent these problems.Does anyone know more about this?Specifically, is there any examples of a single 1mb transaction that takes 30 seconds (or an example 2mb transaction). The FAQ says transactions like these have been mined. Does anyone have any links to those transactions for examination?I'm trying to understand how a transaction can be so complex that it could do this, like how many inputs it would take, how many outputs, what sized fee it would require, etc.Next time XT does large block testing on the TestNet, would anyone be able to use that to test a large script like this?Seems like it's an opportunity to profile the processing subroutines to figure out optimizations and test simple mempool policies to prevent this from occurring. via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1mSNrGy

Interesting podcast about privacy [from 22:54] and fungibility from 39:20] of bitcoin.


http://bit.ly/1TqEO0f via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1YPziuQ

Its official. Cryptsy.com has stolen my BTC

Its been almost a month now since I attempted to transfer 3 BTC from my Cryptsy account to my Coinbase wallet. Despite multiple attempts to contact support there is no response from Cryptsy. I know from this community Cryptsy is no good and its my mistake. Lesson learned thankfully not too much damage but I just want to keep letting people know. DO NOT USE CRYPTSY!



Submitted December 31, 2015 at 01:55AM by bitsandmore http://bit.ly/1NRVBru

To reach their goal of 2k warm meals for @phillyhomeless by midnight tomorrow, Changetip is now matching all donations. I want to help further.


http://bit.ly/1JKgTn7 want to support the mission of @changetip to donate 2,000 warm meals to @phillyhomeless. For each Kialara Labyrinth purchased before midnight tomorrow, (or until 100 are sold) 30 warm meals will be donated to those in need – 15 by myself, and @changetip will be matching this 15. To add more incentive, I’ve lowered the price to $79 which will also end at midnight tomorrow. A purchase of 10 Kialaras will provide 300 meals! Thanks everyone, and Happy New Year! Max- Alternatively you may donate by putting the following message into Twitter: .@changetip, send @phillyhomeless a holiday meal ($1.95). I challenge @friend1 @friend2 @friend3 https://youtu.be/kS3LTp0vW6o #socialgiving Remember - replace "@yourfriend1", etc. with your own three friends. via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1mSJkue

A Bitcoin ATM was just installed at a New York City deli, on West 58th Street & 10th Avenue – Monday, Dec. 28, 2015. This place gets a ton of business during the day, so a whole lot more people are going to be finding out about Bitcoin!

http://bit.ly/1miRGLx

Submitted December 31, 2015 at 01:30AM by tellman1257 http://bit.ly/1RRIkmH

"Bitcoin may be destined to become a high-powered money rather than a day-to-day payment system for the masses." - Nick Szabo, 2011


http://bit.ly/1Oyhhw9 via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1kukBu9

Bitcoin Likely To Be Virtual Gold And FuelCoin A Major Payment Alternative, Says Encrypted Labs CEO


http://bit.ly/1Vqo1M5 via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1Vqo1M6

After helping to a girl who is friend to my sister with remittances, I was surprised to see this on her wall


http://bit.ly/1Py22Az via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1R9463R

"Why I Like Ethereum" by Dan Larimer (bytemaster), BitShares Founder


http://bit.ly/1QZoTZr via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1Tqnusd

If You Want to Limit the Power of the Super-Wealthy, Stop Using their Money


http://bit.ly/1NWa7w4 via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1Sn4exA

Uphold Becomes First Platform to List Voxels


http://bit.ly/1Sn4e0j via /r/CryptoCurrency http://bit.ly/1NWa7fR

5 Bitcoin and Blockchain Startups to Watch in 2016


http://bit.ly/1ZChNuY via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1Olhnpb

Block size consensus has been achieved (almost)!


Many moons ago we had the following actual/perceived/apparent/inferred block size options:Option A: Move to 20 MB by 1 March 2016Option B: Don't change now / don't change as much / review and analyse moreOver the following few months we have had many heated debates with multiple alternative options being put forward.Now, as the year draws to a close, we have 2 options which appear to have the majority of support:Option A: Implement Segregated Witness + other capacity improvements as a soft fork for a 2MB - 4MB effective block size increaseOption B: Implement a 2MB block size hard fork and in parallel implement Segregated Witness + other capacity improvements as a soft forkThese positions are demonstrably much closer than ever and objectively not that far apart. Everyone is likely tired and frustrated with how long this debate has been going on for, but if you take a step back and review the situation, it is clear that we are approaching consensus.TL;DR: I know it doesn't feel like it but we are closer than ever to agreeing a way forward with respect to the Blockchain's block size! via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1Tqh8t1

Buy Anything in Korea with Bitcoin with New Korean Buying Service - KoreanBuddy

Hello Bitcoin community. “Heygodard” and I “medicinebottle” are pre-launching our Korean shopping agent service, “Koreanbuddy.” Koreanbuddy.com And as your KoreanBuddy I'm offering "no fees" on your first order! And we take Bitcoin of course.

Why use KoreanBuddy?

Korean sites have great deals and product selection but are extremely difficult to use as a foreigner, trust me I’m starting this service because of personal experience. Now you don’t have to be frustrated, only happy. You can get help from the many shopping guides on our site which give step-by-step instructions on how to find products on various popular sites here in Korea. If someone here wants us to create a shopping guide on another website, just ask.
Anyone can message us here on the Bitcoin sub or through the messenger on koreanbuddy.com and we will get back to you ASAP, remember that we are on Korean time though ;) Also, if you like making your own shopping lists you can upload your own excel file on the site or just email it to us ;)

How do you get the products?

If you want the product quickly 3-5 days? Then EMS (express). If you want to save money and can wait 10-14 days, then regular Korean Post. You can checkout the FAQ section for more.

How much will it cost you?

For your first order it’s free! 10% if you provide the URL of the items you want, and 20% if you don’t have a URL or it’s an in-store purchase. If you pay in bitcoin you get 50% off on fees. So 5% with URL 10% without.

About us

I am a Canadian who has been living in Korea for 4 years. I help organize the Seoul Bitcoin Meetup and I do those monthly meetup growth reports. My partner is Korean.

Please send any comments and suggestions. Thanks!

As your KoreanBuddy I'm offering "no fees" on your first order. koreanbuddy.com



Submitted December 30, 2015 at 03:26PM by medicinebottle http://bit.ly/1PwUuy2

Debian founder Ian Murdock dead after exposing police abuse publicly, ranting against government and taxes


https://web.archive.org/web/20151229024414/https:/twitter.com/imurdock via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1PxxOzF

Its official. Cryptsy.com has stolen my BTC


Its been almost a month now since I attempted to transfer 3 BTC from my Cryptsy account to my Coinbase wallet. Despite multiple attempts to contact support there is no response from Cryptsy. I know from this community Cryptsy is no good and its my mistake. Lesson learned thankfully not too much damage but I just want to keep letting people know. DO NOT USE CRYPTSY! via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1NRVBru

Help understanding segwit and LN

Would anyone recommend a good YouTube video explaining segwit or LN? I seem to be having issues understanding LN. And, very time I read about segwit it never explains it, just that it's "necessary".



Submitted December 30, 2015 at 02:41PM by qthepirate http://bit.ly/1NQ6V7v

Voorhees on Twitter: The difference between "settlement" and "payment" is a relic of old world. There should be no such distinction in Bitcoin.

https://twitter.com/ErikVoorhees/status/682229546234429440

Submitted December 31, 2015 at 12:26AM by ShapeShift_io http://bit.ly/1R8o1zL

I'm really starting to think some posters here are getting paid to post.


Now that the block size debate is back again I have started to notice there are a few posters here who reply to almost every post with long and very detailed posts trying to push for larger and larger blocks. If they were answering just some of the time then that's one thing but one or two posters answer every single post and consistently fill the threads up saying the same thing over and over again. Am I the only one noticing these posters? via /r/Bitcoin http://bit.ly/1mRQVJe