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Friday, February 28, 2014

Charlie Shrem Speaks Out About Mt. Gox

“I’ve known Mark Karpeles for a very long time. Mark is a very sweet guy. Very non-confrontational, but has he made bad business decisions? Yes. Has he failed to do everything he should have? Yes.”


So says Charlie Shrem, the troubled bitcoin entrepreneur, speaking to me from his parents’ house in New York, where he’s currently under house arrest.



He tells me he classes Karpeles, CEO of the disastrous bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox, as a good friend, but disagrees with a hell of a lot of the decisions the Frenchman has made.

Mt. Gox has been dying a slow and painful death for some months, but now appears to be taking its final breaths after documents came to light suggesting insolvency and the loss of more than 744,400 bitcoins (around $426m).Shrem believes a number of factors are responsible for the exchange’s current issues, from a lack of PR presence to poor management structure, but first and foremost is the inadequacy of the technology Mt. Gox is built upon. He explained:

“The whole exchange is built on layer upon layer of patchy scrap work – the whole thing is flawed because of the way it was built.”

As for the company’s management structure, Shrem said Karpeles may call himself CEO, but he “doesn’t make any of the business decisions”. Gonzague Gay-Bouchery “pretty much runs the company”, despite his official job title as marketing director.The company has also hired a lot of developers, but any developer code that’s created has to be looked over and checked by Karpeles, creating a bottleneck that has severely hampered progress.Shrem believes the company should have, long ago, hired an agency to handle its PR, but it didn’t, because Karpeles didn’t want anyone to know Mt. Gox’s inner workings (read: didn’t want anyone to know what a dire mess it was in).He acknowledges that Karpeles and Mt. Gox have done a massive disservice to bitcoin, but said, in a strange way, they’ve also done everyone a big favour – Gox’s competitors will learn from the mistakes that have been made and will progress with more robust and technologically sound models.

The 24-year-old admitted he has some bitcoins in Mt. Gox and didn’t sound particularly hopeful that he would ever see them again.However, he’s trying his best to be a good friend to Karpeles at a time when he’s (understandably) being hounded from all angles.And Shrem certainly knows all about that, having been headline fodder for a good few weeks earlier in the year, following his arrest on money laundering charges.


Shrem’s arrest

“I didn’t know what was going on. One minute I was getting off my flight, the next I was being arrested.”

“The way they did it – arresting me at the airport in front of a ton of people – the whole thing was set up to make me look like a criminal,” he said.

Shrem believes his arrest was carefully planned by the federal government to damage the public’s perception of bitcoin. He thinks the media hasn’t helped matters, either, by “making assumptions” and publishing articles “without knowing the full story”.He is alleged to have been involved in a scheme to “sell and launder over $1m in bitcoins” through the now defunct online black market Silk Road.A document published by the Manhattan US Attorney alleged Shrem knew 52-year-old Florida native Robert M Faiella was “operating a bitcoin exchange service for Silk Road users” and that the authorities have email correspondence to prove this.The entrepreneur said the emails have been taken out of context and that the government and media seem to think his company, BitInstant, where he was CEO until recently, was selling bitcoins to Faiella. He stressed:


“That’s not how the business worked – we didn’t actually sell any bitcoins.”

BitInstant was designed to enable people to quickly transfer money to their bitcoin exchange accounts. The way Shrem sees it, Faiella allegedly advertised his services on Silk Road, and would send his customers on to BitInstant.These customers would conduct the transactions themselves, then send the money to their own Mt. Gox accounts. Once on this site, they would buy bitcoins, transfer the bitcoin to their Silk Road account and buy illicit goods.“Now how many times am I removed from that already?” he added.



The case

Having recently resigned from board of the Bitcoin Foundation, Shrem said he is now spending the vast majority of his time focusing on his case and “trying to hang on to my sanity”.

He’s working with his lawyer, Marc Agnifilo of Brafman & Associates, to meticulously comb through the 30-something-page complaint against him and try to work out what exactly the charges against him are.


source: http://www.coindesk.com/exclusive-charlie-shrem-speaks-mt-gox-arrest-bitcoin-bromance/




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http://www.guugll.eu/charlie-shrem-speaks-out-about-mt-gox/

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Something’s Not Right at ‘Gox

For those living under a rock, a document surfaced which I can confirm is authentic regarding the insolvency of MtGox titled “MtGox Situation Crisis Strategy”


The document essentially claims that MtGox has ‘lost’ 740,000 BTC over the past few years, at currency price of $592 that amounts to $438,080,000 missing, unnoticed for about four years.

Let’s be honest, that kind of money does not just go missing and I’ve been struggling to accept that this is what really happened. On Sunday evening I called my good friend David Perry from CodingInMySleep.com to run the numbers and see if this is physically possible. For More Information, listen to the second half of Tuesdays Let’s Talk Bitcoin!


We concluded:


We find it hard to believe those coins are missing and the basic math alone should refute this. 740k btc since malleability became known in ’11 is 20k+ btc per month, about 675 btc per day. Even at current prices that’s over 300k USD per day, that’s not the kind of money you just misplace and don’t notice. Now, even if we give the “hacker” credit and suggest they’ve been doing it since the day gox opened that’s still a quarter million per day. In fairness the hackers could have taken a lot more coins when they were less valuable and dialed it back now that the USD value per coin is higher but it still works out to an average of 509 coins per day, if they started the day Gox opened shop. Even when coins were $0.05 that’s still almost $1,000 per month their books wouldn’t balance by. Were talking about 6% of all coins in existence, or ten times the amount of money in any known bitcoin address. If they’ve stolen that much money over that much time the law of averages kicks in, they’d be buying at the median market price for the entire 4 year span, which is $95.49 per coin for a daily take of $48,629.01. If you stole $48,629.01 worth of btc from Gox every day for 4 years, you arrive at 744,000 btc and they couldn’t have stolen the bulk of it right at the start because that many BTC didn’t exist 4 years ago. I’ve seen many emails and blog posts come across my inbox trying to explain what happened, but this is by far the best explanation I have seen.


LTB Listener @Napoleon sent this note :


Adam,

I’m listening to the latest LTB episode, and am presently paused at the point where Charlie Shrem is doing the math on how many bitcoins would have needed to have been stolen per day since Mt Gox’s inception for the 740,000 bitcoins to have disappeared. I believe I “deduced the MtGox situation” Tuesday morning. Only when I heard Charlie talk about it on the podcast and realized that even Mark’s friends didn’t know what was going on did I realize that I should reach out to someone. I rather cynically assumed that insiders were in-the-know and that many others would come to my conclusions soon enough. Perhaps I’m wrong, but because nobody else is talking about it I feel obliged to pass this through you to Charlie — who might be able to act on it.


Simple theory that is plausible and explains some of Mark’s behavior & statements:


Summary


1. A substantial amount of the missing 740k bitcoins are still in addresses that MtGox believed they had control over

2. Transaction malleability thefts did take place, but not nearly 740k coins

3. MtGox believed they were solvent because their watch-wallet continued and continues to show expected cold storage balances

4. MtGox’s deepest coldest-cold storage reserves were never tested until the transaction malleability situation

5. MtGox can not recover the keys to the coldest-cold storage. (possibly a software problem.. custom deterministic wallet? or some other hardware/organization failure)

6. Mark has reason to think that the keys might be recoverable

7. The 2,000 odd coins mentioned in the crisis document represent whats left of the first stage cold wallet/hot wallet coins


Background & Assumptions


I am not familiar with MtGox’s cold wallet management. I have never talked to anyone at MtGox or anyone knowledgeable about MtGox’s practices.

It is preposterous to imagine that 740k bitcoins were lost over any amount of time without anyone noticing. Zero percent likelihood. It is certainly possible that there has been a major coverup and fraud. My theory is the only answer I can come up with that is both plausible and does not involve massive fraud.


Theory


Different Cold Wallets


An operation at MtGox’s size and growth rate requires relatively few coins to satisfy customer withdraws at any given moment. For this reason, MtGox likely has a multi-tiered wallet system that is more complicated than simply a hot wallet and a cold wallet. Perhaps only 5%-20% of customer funds are required to be quickly accessible at any given moment, and perhaps these are split between a cold wallet and a hot wallet. For the vast majority of customer funds there exists a coldest-cold wallet. This coldest-cold wallet is never tapped, while the normal offline transaction signing process is used for the first stage cold wallet to hot wallet transfers.


Cold Wallets Are Watched


All cold wallets are set up in a watch-wallet format, and they balance. The cold wallet is regularly tapped, but with the growth of the site, it never requires the coldest-cold wallet funds. The coldest-cold wallet only grows over time — possibly representing some fixed percentage of total customer funds.


Malleability Hacks


Transaction malleability hacks have been taking place for some period of time, and MtGox was alerted to them. The cold wallet was mostly depleted in this process and for the first time in a long time, perhaps for the first time ever, the coldest-cold wallet was tapped to refill the cold wallet. It was then discovered that the coldest-cold wallet private keys were not functional or were missing.


Private Keys


There are any number of different reasons why the coldest-cold wallet’s keys are wrong/missing/corrupted. Perhaps there is a problem with the elliptic curve in the PHP custom wallet software. Perhaps a drive failed, perhaps a USB key was wiped, or just plain lost. Any number of reasons.


If it is a software problem with a custom wallet, then perhaps Mark believes he might be able to correct it and generate the correct private keys. If it is a data-loss problem then perhaps he thinks it is recoverable in some way.


Fiat Asset & Liabilities Imbalance


There are several ways to account for the shocking difference between the USD assets and liabilities, none strike me as ethical/legal. My guess is that it is the result of an ill-advised plan to continue trading during a sell-off while using customer funds to buy cheap BTC under the assumption that the private keys to the coldest-cold storage would be recovered. This is roughly what MF Global did.


Misc Observations


There was no evidence that hundreds of thousands of coins were missing when Roger Ver made the so-called “hostage” video six months ago. If the transaction malleability problem was being used to steal hundreds of thousands of coins from MtGox, it would have had to have been done over the last half year in substantial amounts. There is good reason to believe that whatever cold-storage solution MtGox has developed that there are wallets which may have not been tested for months or years. Very few coins would be required to be in first stage cold or hot wallets in order to run the operation. There is good reason to believe that Mark can fuck up essential code. Depending on the nature of the theoretical wallet bug, it is possible that early tests of public/private pairs were successful, and only later did the wallet software begin producing incorrect private keys.


If MtGox was watching the public addresses of their coldest-cold wallets then they would have had no reason to be concerned, and accounting would have balanced right up until the end.


The transaction malleability thefts likely occurred. But there is little possibility these thefts included many hundreds of thousands of coins and were not noticed over an extended period of time — or that MtGox would not question shifting 99.5% of BTC reserves out of a cold wallet over a short period of time. If this continues to be the story, then it is very likely that Mark is involved in a massive fraud.


Burned Coins


If my theory is basically correct then majority of the coins are either lost forever due to key mismanagement — or they are possibly recoverable. If they are lost forever, I can imagine why Mark would mislead even his close friends out of embarrassment and suggest that all of the coins were stolen. If they are lost forever I can imagine why Mark might delude himself into believing they might be recoverable. If they might be recoverable, I can imagine why Mark would want to keep it private until he recovered them — even parsing words : “Well technically they’re not ‘lost’ just yet, just temporarily unavailable.” If it is likely that they are recoverable, I can imagine why a venture firm would agree to purchase a company in MtGox’s state.

If my theory is basically correct and Mark is hiding this information while he attempts to recover the keys on his own, then Charlie might be able to convince him to allow other people to help.

If the coins are burned and lost forever, then the demise of MtGox is quite a different story for the markets than it is now. Of course it means that there are considerably fewer bitcoins than were assumed to be available for trade a few days ago. Everyone’s coins are that much more scarce.



I run a small IRC channel on a home server for some friends, and when I floated this theory to them on Tuesday morning, one of them took the idea to #bitcoin on Freenode. In fact, you probably know my friend. My friend posted a single sentence summary in heavy chat traffic: “What if MtGox simply lost the coins due to an EC bug in their custom wallet implementation?” Within seconds a developer pounced on him with questions: “What is your source?… Who told you this?.. Tell me what you know…” They ended up in private chat where my friend informed the developer that it was just speculation by a friend with no inside knowledge. It turns out that the developer has a friend who has had much the same problem before, and his immediate interest suggests to me that he considers the theory plausible, too. For what it’s worth, I have no coins or fiat stuck at MtGox — nor do I know anyone with anything stuck at Gox.


The theft story just can not account for the totality of the missing funds — and I think that it is much more likely that something like what I have described above is happening. And it is at least possible that if I am correct, and if Mark is hiding this fact, that an intervention could lead to smart professionals recovering private keys and saving the day.



source: http://letstalkbitcoin.com/somethings-not-right-at-gox/




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http://www.guugll.eu/somethings-not-right-at-gox/

Mark Karpeles: 'I Am Still In Japan'

Mark Karpeles, the chief executive of troubled Bitcoin exchange Mt Gox, has sought to calm market concerns by insisting he remains in Japan, where the company is based.


Karpeles says he is working hard with technical teams to solve a major security issue, which forced an operational shutdown at the company. Some 744,408 Bitcoins, worth over $350 million, were allegedly lost or stolen, owing to a technical problem. The security problems have seen angry customers flooding internet forums as well as protesting outside Mt Gox offices, demanding their money back. Some even suggested Karpeles might have fled Japan in the wake of the problems, a claim he denies. In a statement posted online today, Mt Gox CEO Mark Karpeles writes: “As there is a lot of speculation regarding MtGox and its future, I would like to use this opportunity to reassure everyone that I am still in Japan, and working very hard with the support of different parties to find a solution to our recent issues.”


In his statement, Karpeles says more information will be released soon: “I would like to kindly ask that people refrain from asking questions to our staff: they have been instructed not to give any response or information. Please visit this page for further announcements and updates.”


According to an apparent Mt Gox crisis document, which has been widely circulated online, the company is considering shutting down trading for an entire month while it rebrands itself as ‘Gox’, brings in new management, and employs a fresh set of technical staff. The document is not officially confirmed, but internet messenger conversations detailed on Fox Business appear to show Karpeles telling industry consultant Jon Fisher that it is “more or less” legitimate. Mt Gox’s technical issues have been under the spotlight for the last two weeks, after the company blamed the Bitcoin Foundation for the “transaction malleability” issues that opened the currency to fraudulent manipulation. Many social media commenters said Mt Gox was a serious part of the problem after failing to update its own technology.In an interview with Forbes at the time, Karpeles said that Mt Gox had regularly upgraded its own Bitcoin implementation in order to keep pace with the developments set by the Foundation, but added that the exchange “couldn’t keep up with all the changes”.



Earlier this week, Karpeles resigned from his seat on the board of the Bitcoin Foundation. He has not responded to requests for further comment.


source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/leoking/2014/02/26/mt-gox-ceo-mark-karpeles-i-am-still-in-japan/




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http://www.guugll.eu/mark-karpeles-i-am-still-in-japan/

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

MTGOX SUBPOENAED BY US PROSECUTOR

MtGox has been subpoenaed by the U.S. Attorney’s office in New York, the Wall Street Journal’s Christopher M. Matthews reports.


An unnamed source tells him simply that federal prosecutors sent the subpoena this month. A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in New York decline to comment to BI.

MtGox shut trading operations last night over what it says were “recent news reports and the potential repercussions on MtGox’s operations and the market.”

Soon after the WSJ broke the story, Reuters reported that Japanese authorities were also looking into the Tokyo-based exchange.

“At this stage the relevant financial authorities, the police, the Finance Ministry and others are gathering information on the case,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said in a news conference, according to Reuters. MtGox has effectively been blackballed within the Bitcoin community. Six of the largest Bitcoin firms published a statement last night denouncing Gox’s violation of users’ trust, and Gox resigned its position on the Bitcoin Foundation this past weekend. Meanwhile, Fox News Business’ Kathryn Glass says she has obtained a chat transcript conducted by a consultant named Jon Fisher with MtGox CEO Mark Karpeles in which Karpeles claims he is still working to save the firm. Karpeles also says a leaked report indicating a massive, ongoing theft at MtGox, was “more or less legit” but that the document itself had not been produced by Gox. Business Insider has unsuccessfully tried to reach out to Karpeles, although the Mt. Gox CEO did respond to Reuters via email.

“We should have an official announcement ready soon-ish,” he wrote, without providing more details or revealing his location. “We are currently at a turning point for the business. I can’t tell much more for now as this also involves other parties.”



source: http://www.businessinsider.com/report-mtgox-subpoenaed-by-us-prosecutor-2014-2




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http://www.guugll.eu/mtgox-subpoenaed-by-us-prosecutor/

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

GOX Crisis Strategy Draft

For several weeks MtGox customers have been affected by bitcoin withdrawal issues that

compounded on themselves.


Publicly, MtGox declared that “transaction malleability” caused the

system to be subject to theft, and that something needed to be done by the core devs to fix it.

Gox’s own workaround solution was criticized, and eventually a fix was provided by

Blockchain.info.

The truth, it turns out, is that the damage had already been done.

At this point 744,408 BTC are missing due to malleability-related theft which went

unnoticed for several years. The cold storage has been wiped out due to a leak in the hot

wallet.

The reality is that MtGox can go bankrupt at any moment, and certainly deserves to as a

company. However, with Bitcoin/crypto just recently gaining acceptance in the public eye, the

likely damage in public perception to this class of technology could put it back 5~10 years, and

cause governments to react swiftly and harshly. At the risk of appearing hyperbolic, this could be

the end of Bitcoin, at least for most of the public.

We believe in the value of Bitcoin, its potential to change the world, and its principles of

transparency. Most importantly we care about the customers of MtGox and other bitcoin-based

businesses who will be affected.

The likely consequences will be larger than this localized financial damage, and we believe that

the benefits of keeping MtGox stable and running outweigh the risks. This isn’t about saving

MtGox anymore.


To avoid a chaotic situation, we propose:

1- Immediately reduce liabilities as much as possible with partners

With actual assets using arbitrage/ injecting new coins to erase them from the books. Informing and

asking selected Bitcoin main players to ask for their help. The MtGox price is low, making it possible

to erase a significant portion of the debt, but it needs to be done quickly. Injections in coin are most

useful (enough to run the exchange) but some cash is also needed to not run a fractional reserve.

2- Switch off the MtGox exchange temporarily (1 month) while announcing a restructuring and

re-branding

On a freshly branded static homepage, post a letter from Mark Karpelès stepping down as CEO of

MtGox, bringing in transition advisors, and citing poor organization and technology. Moving to a new

country (Singapore?) could be helpful.

3- Push the new branding (ready) and reset all SNS channels for communication:

Using Facebook, Twitter, etc with the new branding, we will give constant updates, changing the tone

of communications and informing stakeholders on all progress: new advisors, team members,

location, fee structure. We need to inspire confidence.

4- Set up a competent team and redesign the service and codebase:

Announce a new CEO, talented developers, and trusted business people to establish a new business

model. ( Finance, marketing strategy, IT, developers, Customer support). Build a low-cost, profitable

business again that gives customers a reason to stay (low fees, stability, etc) while we work off our

debts to stakeholders.


Part 1: To reduce liabilities

The stakeholders of MtGox are not the owners, but everyone in Bitcoin. This is sad

but the reality.

The current situation will negatively affect everyone who owns or operates in Bitcoin.

We will need to inject fresh coins inside the system in order to establish a basis to

eventually clear the books by running the exchange (perhaps 200,000 coins). The

costs of not doing so are incalculable at this stage.

Support from Bitcoin big players and core community — long term, high

leverage:

Coins for equity, coin donations, and cash injections to buy coins at the cheap

MtGox price are some options among many.

Bet on future profit to refill the lost coins — Long term, low leverage:

Regardless of malleability and regulatory issues, MtGox’s main problems are

massive robbery and poor bitcoin accounting. However, the business as an

exchange is highly profitable and healthy when run properly.


Part 2: Shut down MtGox.com, launch new branding

Big focus on the future

Letter from the CEO


Admitting his errors and expressing desire to fix the situation by

stepping back as a CEO. Blaming the technology implementation

which was not sized and designed to deal with such level of

transactions or to deal with malleability.


It’s time to step up and face reality by bringing a transition of

respected advisors who will run things properly.


In Japan, a CEO cannot resign until a new CEO is nominated. In that

case customers knows that MtGox is still around and working, but

under new management. Try to reduce the impact and raise

stakeholder confidence, and eventually get Mark out.


New branding, means that there are future-forward plans already in

the works, and customers will see that MtGox actually has a plan in

motion


Part 3: 1 month transition while updating the

industry

In order for stakeholders to follow up on MtGox progress, we will use SNS

platforms with constant positive communications.


- Every new milestone reached will be announced: Team members, new

marketing, progress on the technology implementation etc…


- The Customer support will stay operational to deal with people who

want to have access to their account/history


- During this period, the advisory board will be created, hopefully a new

CEO can be chosen and try to reset and secure the trading engine platform.


Expertise to find: Analysts, top class developers (crypto), IT security expert,

marketing, Bitcoin experts, economists, execs (CFO, COO, CMO, etc)


Part 4: MtGox becomes Gox

To avoid a bank run from customers, the daily amount of bitcoin and cash

withdrawals will be limited.

With the profit, a meticulous analysis will be made over the coming years

to clean the bitcoin balance sheet while running the exchange and

generating revenue to pay back stakeholders.

New offerings such as additional currencies, low trading fees, etc will give

customers a reason to stay with MtGox.

The new branding is already complete, and new services such as the

Bitpocket wallet are already developed and ready for deployment.

With a new image, team, and offering we believe that it will be a

challenge, but is not impossible. The risks of not acting are incredibly

large and unpredictable.





Guugll Search


http://www.guugll.eu/gox-crisis-strategy-draft/

Monday, February 24, 2014

MtGox chief Mark Karpeles quits Bitcoin Foundation

The chief executive of Bitcoin exchange MtGox, Mark Karpeles, has quit the board of the Bitcoin Foundation, which oversees and develops Bitcoin software.


It comes shortly after MtGox halted transfers of the digital currency to external addresses after it spotted what it called “unusual activity”.

The halt resulted in a sharp decline in the value of Bitcoins.

Last week, MtGox — one of the largest Bitcoin exchanges — said customers should be able withdraw funds “soon”.

Meanwhile, all tweets on MtGox’s Twitter account have also been deleted.

The Bitcoin Foundation said that Mr Karpeles’s resignation would be “effective immediately”.

It is the foundation’s second high-profile resignation in the past month.

Another board member, Charles Shrem, stepped down in late January after being arrested and charged with money laundering in connection with his Bitcoin company.

Mr Shrem, the chief executive of New York-based Bitcoin exchange BitInstant, has pleaded not guilty.


Dispute

The issues with MtGox had sparked a dispute between the exchange and the Bitcoin Foundation.

The Tokyo-based firm said that its investigation into the unusual activity revealed a loophole that could be exploited to fool the transaction process into sending double the correct number of Bitcoins.

It also left it vulnerable to attacks, which slowed down the rate at which coins could be bought and sold.

As it halted the withdrawals, MtGox had suggested that a flaw in the virtual currency’s underlying software was to blame for the problem.

“A bug in the Bitcoin software makes it possible for someone to use the Bitcoin network to alter transaction details to make it seem like a sending of Bitcoins to a Bitcoin wallet did not occur when in fact it did occur,” it had said in a statement.

“Since the transaction appears as if it has not proceeded correctly, the Bitcoins may be resent.”

However, Gavin Andresen, chief scientist at the Bitcoin Foundation, denied the problem was its fault.

“The issues that MtGox has been experiencing are due to an unfortunate interaction between MtGox’s highly customised wallet software, their customer support procedures, and an obscure (but long-known) quirk in the way transactions are identified and not due to a flaw in the Bitcoin protocol,” he told the BBC earlier this month.



Mark Karpelès, chief executive officer of Mt. Gox, the embattled Tokyo-based bitcoin exchange, resigned on Sunday from the board of the Bitcoin Foundation, according to a person familiar with the situation.The Bitcoin Foundation confirmed in a statement on its website that Mt. Gox had resigned its board seat and thanked Mt. Gox for its efforts in launching the group.

The move comes amid a string of long-standing technical issues that began last summer when Mt. Gox halted customer withdrawals in U.S. dollars.

The problems became more severe earlier this month when Mt. Gox halted all customer withdrawals, saying that a bug in the software for bitcoin allowed some users to alter transactions. The problems prompted CoinDesk to remove Mt. Gox from its bitcoin-pricing index earlier this month. The exchange told customers last week that it was still working on “reinitiating” bitcoin withdrawals. Mt. Gox is one of several industry representatives on the board of the foundation, a trade organization that advocates for the virtual currency.

Many investors in the bitcoin community had called for the resignation of Mr. Karpelès from the board of the Bitcoin Foundation, including a British-based marketing consultant who has posted an online petition calling for Mr. Karpelès’s removal.


A phone call to Mt. Gox’s office in Tokyo rang unanswered.

It is the foundation’s second high-profile resignation in the past month. Board member Charles Shrem stepped down in late January after being arrested and charged with money laundering in connection with his bitcoin company. Mr. Shrem has pleaded not guilty.

Mt. Gox bitcoins traded at around $191 in midday Monday trading in Tokyo, while the Coindesk index bitcoin traded at around $578.

The “discount at Mt Gox reflects the markets ongoing belief that bankruptcy is a high possibility,” said Mark T. Williams, who teaches finance at Boston University in an email on Friday. “They have a considerable customer base that remains prevented from getting their money out,” said Mr. Williams, who has expressed skepticism about bitcoin.

Eric Bosma, a 60-year-old part-time health-care worker from Mission, British Columbia, said he has been trading bitcoins for the past six months to try to earn some extra income, but hasn’t been able to withdraw his about 5.25 bitcoin in Mt. Gox despite repeated attempts. “I have contacted Mt. Gox many, many times in the past two weeks and all I get is what seems to be bot emails,” he said in an email. “All I want is my bitcoin back.”



source: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303426304579401883794330454?mg=reno64-wsj&url=http%3A%2F%2Fonline.wsj.com%2Farticle%2FSB10001424052702303426304579401883794330454.html & http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-26319247




Guugll Search


http://www.guugll.eu/mtgox-chief-mark-karpeles-quits-bitcoin-foundation/

Sunday, February 23, 2014

MinCoin trading volume increased by 550%

Something, or someone, is happening to MinCoin.


In the last couple of hours MinCoin has been traded for more than 1000 Bitcoins. That’s trade for more than 620 000 USD. Surprisingly enough, MinCoin has kept most of its value. The buys and sells have all together kept the price of MNC around 0.0012 to 0.0015 BTC.



MinCoin has seen some improvements lately with a new MinCoin team and strategy. But still they have a tough job to differentiate themselves in the world of Altcoins.


MinCoin, which is our sponsored cryptocurrency for the next months, have increased its trading volume by 550% in the last couple of days. We have written about features that the MinCoin team recently have created, which might have given the crypto commodity gained trust.


Yesterday the MinCoin team launched a new MinCoin wallet with upgraded interface. They write:


We are very proud to present the latest, freshest, and sexiest MinCoin wallet to date. We’ve spent countless hours of dedicated work, in order to deliver to you the best wallet experience yet, based on the most secure source code available. If you haven’t yet downloaded the MinCoin Wallet, then we highly suggest you check it out – you will be amazed at how simplified and straight forward we’ve made it.


Marketing Campaign



Including pushing new MinCoin features, the MinCoin team have started a marketing campaign of the altcoin which also includes being sponsored on CryptoCoinsNews.com.


source: http://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/2014/02/19/mincoin-traded-1000-btc-last-couple-hours/ & http://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/2014/02/17/mincoin-trading-volume-increased-550/




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http://www.guugll.eu/mincoin-trading-volume-increased-by-550/

Friday, February 21, 2014

Feathercoin: stable and fast

A newcomer to the market, Feathercoin has gained heavy traction since its launch around nine months ago, with many people mining and trading the new version of cryptocurrency.


And though it’s still a relative featherweight compared to Bitcoin, no doubt the founder, Peter Bushnell has done a good job of developing it.


Feathercoin, based on Litecoin, produces 16 times as many coins per block solved as Bitcoin, and will have around 336 million coins. It has a low level of difficulty for solving blocks compared to other cryptocurrencies, and the same security as Litecoin.


There’s a lot going on around Feathercoin. It has established its own nascent eBay-style marketplace. There’s a website, enabling people to trade coins directly with each other. A physical version of the coin is being developed, potentially with an NFC reader embedded in it, and another project is to put metadata in the block chain, to assist with the transmission of files.


However, some say it’s a poorly made copy of Litecoin. We’ve got a comment by one of the administrators at bitcoinexaminer.org, Ian Irving.


There have been many instances when it’s been subject to various attacks. A lot of people don’t think it’s very stable. Its key feathure is that it’s very fast.


Its founder, Peter Bushnell, says it’s transparency that differentiates Feathercoin. It is controlled from a house in the sleepy Oxfordshire suburb of Arncott, while its founder until May 2013 ran the IT department at Oxford University’s Brasenose College. He is sure that eventually Feathercoin would become something that’s fit for the mass, for consumers to use. They just have to believe that there is a lot of money in it.


Feathercoin Official Weekly Update #21


Everything Points Towards Success


Feathercoin Key Stats

307 days since genesis block creation

Approx. 33,700,000 Feathercoins created

Approx. 14 days behind target generation rate


Or is it every-one? Nothing is just everything without direction and greatness cannot be achieved until we learn to love what it is we do. Today we show the power of execution.


Coinfest Success

And we begin with the powerful @Motherlode1 and @Lizardman aka Norman and David respectively. These guys put in a lot of energy in to the Coinfest[/url] expo in Vancouver Canada last weekend. Feathercoin had a stall and was met by lots of supporters; people who said they loved Feathercoin but for one reason or another just hadn’t stopped to say ‘hi’ on the forum yet. Norman was kind enough to make note of their feedback so that we could continue to improve on the website.


One of the things I really admire about Norman is his ability to take responsibility and fix problems. He said he was going to do something and then he did it. If there was a hiccup, even if it was outside of his control, he apologised anyway and found a workaround. He kept his focus and remembered what was important. To make no mention of all the work he did in the background to imagine the opportunity ahead of him and turn it in to a reality.


For a while before the Livestream it looked like we wouldn’t be able to do it.


We spoke to Nathan and Corrina (seek 13:12) who told us they are building a project that sees the proceeds from mining go towards helping children who are at risk so that they can fund scholarship programs. This is so beautiful I just had to pick this out of the lineup. Checkout CryptØYouth‘s Facebook page and give them a Like or head over to their site http://crypt0youth.org. I will sort them out with some Feathercoins very soon using Michael Harrison’s Feathertipper[/url], which by the way was also a star of the show and was used to send tips to some of the people who left us their Twitter @ tags.

The event would not have been possible without the hard work from the guys at Coinfest. We are in talks about hosting one in the UK as well and we look forward to working with them again in the future.


You did! That’s right, you punched above your weight and redefined a more meaningful goal because the last one was way too easy apparently. Well that is according to @HopeStillFlies who upped the stakes by matching all the previous donations with one big mega buy!


Hope does indeed still fly. Did I do any of that weird philosophical stuff in this news yet?


Memory is the eye of imagination but it is only hope that pierces through to create a path in to a future. A hope that dreams of a day that our past will be uncovered and understood differently and with compassion.


Yeah anyway to be specific this is a stretch goal. It won’t embarrass us if we don’t make it but wouldn’t be fun if we did? The Raffle will be drawn at the Oxford Blue this Saturday[/url] at 20:00 UTC. If you’re around we’d love to see you. Ruthie is planning on getting a livestream together.


Success is achieved when we learn how to enjoy what we do and @Uncle_Muddy is having a whale of a time.


Big thanks go to @Bush, @Sev, @Entimp, and Peter (@555) and all of the others who contributed to this project. We got there in the end and it has given us a platform on which we can grow. The main website is in WordPress which means we can start adding you guys as bloggers. We want to use the main image on the home page to feature your projects. So get working and send us your pictures.


Note: we have had a few spambots reactivitate since installing the new forum. This should be sorted soon as the permissions were changed. We would love to get your feedback so that we can continue to improve it, this is for all of us so give us a shout in the comments.


One Year Anniversary of Feathercoin

Well not quite yet. But I am pleased to welcome back @Entimp, where would we be without him?, who has brought forth the idea of a one year anniversary celebration for Feathercoin this coming April. Now this is an plan I think we can all get behind. Head over to his thread and help him develop this worthy event.


TL:DR

The more you do the more you can do, procrastination is too much like hard work because you just end up getting in your own way. Sometimes we need to look to our heroes who can show us how to do it. They are doers, that is to say they are thinkers with the courage to commit.


I hope you will take the inspiration from these newsletters and show everyone what you can do with it.



source: http://voiceofrussia.com/news/2014_01_28/Feathercoin-stable-and-fast-7337/ and




Guugll Search


http://www.guugll.eu/feathercoin-stable-and-fast/

MinCoin traded for more than 1000 BTC

omething, or someone, is happening to MinCoin.


In the last couple of hours MinCoin has been traded for more than 1000 Bitcoins. That’s trade for more than 620 000 USD. Surprisingly enough, MinCoin has kept most of its value. The buys and sells have all together kept the price of MNC around 0.0012 to 0.0015 BTC.


MinCoin has seen some improvements lately with a new MinCoin team and strategy. But still they have a tough job to differentiate themselves in the world of Altcoins.



source: http://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/2014/02/19/mincoin-traded-1000-btc-last-couple-hours/




Guugll Search


http://www.guugll.eu/mincoin-traded-for-more-than-1000-btc/

VirtEx, Now Accepts Litecoin

Here’s some awesome news for Canadians. VirtEx, Canada’s first and largest Bitcoin exchange just started accepting Litecoin for LTC/CAD (Canadian dollars) and BTC/LTC trading.



While VirtEx is a relatively small exchange when compared to the likes of Mt. Gox and Bitstamp, it’s the most widely-used exchange in Canada and has generally positive reviews.


“I’m Canadian and a big fan of Virtex. They’ve been nothing but professional in all their dealings with me and they’ve always been eager to help when there were problems.This bodes well for LTC uptake.”


-”gibzeez” from reddit



The site already has a large Litecoin trade volume, and if users use a VirtEx debit card, they can convert LTC to fiat using Canadian ATMs.


However, the service isn’t without issues. VirtEx charges a high 3% fee (used to be 6%), and their “Know Your Customer” policy requires verification that can take months. As a result, some Canadians have turned to alternatives like Vault of Satoshi, which has speedy verification but even higher fees, and CoinTrader, which has lower fees and faster verification, but doesn’t offer Litecoin and only accepts US Dollars (somewhat ironic for a Canadian exchange).


Still, many Canadians don’t seem to mind VirtEx’s problems, believing that their professional service makes up for issues such as high fees.


“Really expensive on the fees, but I guess that’s the price you have to pay for a company that’s pioneering bitcoin trade in Canada, pressuring the govt to outline proper guidelines for handling it, and has yet to do a single thing to lose the trust of its clients.


And I’m ok with that.”


-”Turtlecupcakes” on reddit



Canada is considered a Bitcoin-friendly country. In fact, the world’s first Bitcoin ATM was installed in Canada by Robocoin. Perhaps Litecoin will see similar success in Canada.



source: http://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/2014/02/21/virtex-canadas-largest-bitcoin-exchange-now-accepts-litecoin/




Guugll Search


http://www.guugll.eu/virtex-now-accepts-litecoin/

Marginally Useful

Bitcoin itself may not flourish as a currency, but the underlying technology is beginning to suggest valuable new applications.


Bitcoin, a purely digital currency, is backed by no commodity and governed by no central bank, but it exists because a small number of humans have chosen to believe in its legitimacy.



Its pseudonymous creator (or, more likely, creators) “Satoshi Nakamoto” willed it into existence in 2009, not only describing how the so-called cryptocurrency would work but shipping a full working implementation. The original software had all the hallmarks of a gag or hack: a great, metastasizing practical joke played by clever cyberlibertarian coders upon all who put their faith in fiat (that is, government-backed) currencies.


Then came the believers. Today, there are thousands of people loyal to the ideology and opportunities that Bitcoin represents. They imagine a world where economies are less dependent on banks and governments, and they’re actually using Bitcoin, often in disruptive ways. The currency had a rocky start when it became the medium of exchange for illegal drug transactions on Silk Road, but that huge narcotics marketplace was shut down last October and its founder arrested. Indeed, the currency seems more or less respectable. Since Bitcoin is essentially a kind of transaction log, where past transactions are public and known to the world, it is of great interest to prosecutors, who have called the coins “Prosecution Futures.” Last year, even U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke gave them his cautious endorsement.


Bitcoin may or may not become a commonly used currency. As a form of money, it is an established medium of exchange; but so far it is a poor store of value. (See “Bitcoin Economics”.) More than 60 percent of the bitcoins created remain unspent: they are being hoarded speculatively. (No wonder: the value of an individual bitcoin, which was less than a dollar in January 2009, was around $932 in early February.) Those unspent coins could flood the market at any time, depressing their value. Even now, the bitcoin’s value fluctuates wildly.


But while it may be wishful thinking to imagine Bitcoin asa true currency, it’s a highly functional and effective technology. Bitcoin’s “block chain protocol” is built atop well-understood, established cryptographic standards and allows perfect certainty about which transactions occurred when. Nakamoto’s original paper is admirably clear. Free and open implementations of software, as we learned from the immense success of the open World Wide Web and Linux, trump everything else.


Money from nothing



What can you do with bitcoins, or with cryptocurrencies in general? You can spend them, of course. You can hold them in a digital “wallet.” But whereas fiat currency is minted by asovereign entity of some sort, you can make new digital money—in fact, it’s the only way currency can be created. The process, called“mining”in the Bitcoin vernacular,involves repeatedly running a computationally intensive mathematical function (called a cryptographic hash function) on a set of randomly seeded inputs until a specific pattern pops up. Many computers all over the world are racing to solve the same function—but typically only one wins. The results are publicized on the Internet for the rest of the Bitcoin network. To create scarcity, the Bitcoin system is designed so that over time the function becomes harder and harder to solve (and therefore requires more computer resources). The number of bitcoins given out as a reward is halved at regular intervals. After 21 million coins have been created, mining stops and no more can be created. For some people, this means Get in now!—often using specialized, expensive “mining rigs.”


There are other ways to participate in the crypto-economy. Some people have built exchanges, and others have built websites that track the entire transaction history of every coin or fraction of a coin. Still others have built gambling websites like Satoshi Dice, which allow punters to gamble in a weird, automated fashion.


If you already feel jaded about Bitcoin, there are alternatives. Litecoin is a version of Bitcoin that can be mined with regular computers. Dogecoin is a variation on the Litecoin idea that was named after an Internet meme featuring a proud Shiba Inu dog. It is trading vigorously; $30,000 in Dogecoin was raised to send the Jamaican bobsled team to the 2014 winter Olympics. Hundreds of such currencies now exist, such as TeslaCoin or ElephantCoin. They differ in the hashing algorithms they use, the number of coins they make available over time, and other details. Each of them hopes to find a sweet spot in the emerging global cryptocurrency marketplace.


Most interestingly, cryptocurrencies can be used for purposes other than those that conventional currencies fulfill. For example, Namecoin is a system used to create and exchange domain names: the coins contain information about the domain names themselves. Recall that the domain name market has about $3 billion in revenue per year: it’s a good example of a weird, scarce digital resource. And Bitmessage is a Bitcoin-inspired messaging platform that allows for anonymous (or at least pseudonymous) communication. What Namecoin and Bitmessage share is that they allow data to be added to the transaction, making the exchange one not just of perceived value but also of information.


Or take digital art. Larry Smith, a partner at the business architecture consultancy The matix and an analyst with long experience in digital advertising and digital finance, asks us to “imagine digital items that can’t be reproduced.” If we attached a coin identifier to a digital image, Smith says, “we could now call that a unique, one-of-a-kind digital entity.” Media on the Internet—where unlimited copying and sharing has become a scourge to rights holders—would suddenly be provably unique, permanently identified, and attached to an unambiguous monetary value.


Smith believes that cryptocurrencies will have wide application across business and culture, including both banking and online advertising. For banks, Bitcoin is “just a new source of money,” he suggests. “Banks are very hungry to advance their value through technology.” It’s easy to imagine, say, HSBCoin, or BarclaysBucks, giving investors who want choice in the currencies they use the services of a trusted financial brand.


And what of the enormous revenue-generating engine of online advertising? Advertisers pay to reach highly valued online audiences; they use a variety of technologies, many surprisingly ineffective, to find these individuals. Could cryptocurrencies help? Smith asks us to consider the following scenario: imagine a brand like Dunkin’ Donuts that wanted to create a loyalty program. Now imagine that brand creating its own currency: DunkinDollars. Finally, imagine an online advertising campaign where people who clicked on an advertisement would be given the virtual coins. Small amounts of money might be distributed without friction. If large brands could create their own currencies and allow individuals to participate in this marketplace, they could create consumers who were truly invested, in every sense.


The entire web of advertising would suddenly become a more interesting place. Before, the ads seemed to hunt you, but now you would have reason to hunt for ads. The coins you earned could then be exchanged for branded goods, but they could also be exchanged on an open market, like a kind of penny stock. “Pay consumers for clicks and acquisitions,” says Smith, defining this new kind of model.


The idea of paying people to look at ads was tried during the last Internet boom (by the startups AllAdvantage—“the dumbest dot.com in the world,” according to CNN Money—and the infamous FreePC). And failed virtual currencies such as Beenz and Flooz preceded the success of Bitcoin. But there might be advantages to trying again with the newer cryptocurrencies: offering more value to consumers might make the idea work this time. Right now, the cookie model of Web tracking is dominant; ads are just media objects. But cryptocurrency-mining software, written in Java-Script, has been demonstrated running in a Web browser; you can break up the task of mining and parallelize it. So an advertiser could treat ads as executable software, creating a multimillion-node supercomputer cluster. By engaging with an ad, the user might earn virtual currency while mining and verifying transactions in the network. Perhaps the future of advertising will involve a new set of activities for consumers, as yet unknown.


A post-scarcity economy



Expand banking, make digital art unique, reinvent online advertising—these are just some of the things Bitcoin might do. In response to the perceived opportunities, the venture capital community has entered a state of hallucinatory excitement about cryptocurrencies, with Marc Andreessen, cofounder of Netscape and the venture firm Andreessen Horowitz, performing as the principal cheerleader.


And yet … these applications seem prosaically narrow in comparison to the more perfervid claims of Bitcoin’s cyberlibertarian enthusiasts. (According to a video on bitcoin.org, “Bitcoin is changing finance the same way the Web changed publishing”—a claim that would recommend itself only to those who have enjoyed the discomfort of traditional media.) But perhaps that’s the point: to succeed, Bitcoin will need to offer real utility to existing markets. The last two decades have suggested a post-scarcity economy, where infinite copies of attractive digital things have a price approaching $0. Maybe that was merely a passing moment that we will look back upon with wonder once limited coins enforce scarcity—once the owner of a piece of digital art can look upon it with satisfaction and know with total, cryptographic certainty that because he paid for it, it belongs to him and no one else.


source: http://www.technologyreview.com/review/524691/marginally-useful/




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http://www.guugll.eu/marginally-useful/

Monday, February 3, 2014

The Best of George Carlin

The Best of George Carlin: Exposing our government and fall of humanity one joke at a time





Guugll Search


http://www.guugll.eu/the-best-of-george-carlin/

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Bitcoin Now Accepted at Every 7-Eleven

We’re continuing to see the ability to pay with Bitcoin trickle out into large brick-and-mortar stores in different parts of the world, even when it seems like those stores have not given Bitcoin their stamp of approval.


We had many different Subways begin to accept Bitcoin a few months ago, and now you can also use Bitcoin as a payment option at the 7-Elevens and Ghandi bookstores in Mexico. Although these stores are not accepting bitcoins directly, they accept payments from something called the Pademobile wallet. You can link your Coinbase account to this mobile wallet, which allows you to send payments with nothing more than a cell phone number.


It’s Still a Big Deal


Even though this is not an endorsement from 7-Eleven, this kind of use case for Bitcoin is still a big deal. Whether or not a large retailer is actually coming out to endorse Bitcoin does not really matter, as long as you can use Bitcoin as a payment option at their store. 7-Eleven is an international brand that many people will recognize as soon as they hear the name, so the fact that you can now use bitcoins at their convenience stores in Mexico should be viewed as nothing but a positive piece of news for Bitcoin.


The Year of Merchant Adoption



Although we saw a few merchants hop on the Bitcoin bandwagon in 2013, 2014 has already proven itself to be the year of Bitcoin merchant adoption. Overstock and TigerDirect have already hopped on board, and they should be able to force the hands of many other retailers, at least in the online realm. Newegg would be a good bet as the next large merchant to accept Bitcoin, but sometimes a retailer will come out of nowhere to make a big splash. At this point in time, it isn’t that surprising to hear that a new company with a valuation in the billions of dollars has decided to accept Bitcoin.



source: http://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/2014/02/01/bitcoin-accepted-7-eleven-mexico/




Guugll Search


http://www.guugll.eu/bitcoin-now-accepted-at-every-7-eleven/