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Friday, July 25, 2014

Dell: Bitcoin Aligns Our Brand With Innovation


Texas-based computer technology giant Dell became the largest merchant to join the bitcoin ecosystem late last week when it announced a partnership with Coinbase and launched a 10% discount for bitcoin customers.

The news was greeted with applause by the bitcoin ecosystem and proliferated widely through the mainstream media given Dell’s strong brand recognition and status as an early success story from the PC computing era.

Now, speaking to CoinDesk in a new interview, Paul Walsh, CIO of Dell Commerce Services, has provided more insight into his company’s decision to begin accepting bitcoin payments, a first of what he acknowledged could become his company’s more extensive involvement in the space.

Perhaps most notably, Walsh indicated that Dell doesn’t consider itself to be an early adopter of bitcoin. Rather, he suggested that Dell believes merchants are already broadly moving toward accepting digital currency as a payment option, and that the decision simply finds Dell keeping pace with the times and the needs of its existing customers.

Walsh told CoinDesk:
“We’ve got to ensure we know where the market is going and what’s happening everywhere. We have regular communication with our customers, we understand exactly what they’re looking for [and] where they may have friction in their path, we look to see if there are any big innovations that would benefit our customers.”
Dell became the largest public company to go private last year when original founder Michael Dell closed a $25bn deal to regain its leadership.

According to the company’s last public filing, it earned $56.9bn in 2013, with the largest gain in revenue increase in its enterprise solutions and services business.

Improving customer service

For now, Walsh said the company’s main goal for its bitcoin program will be to remove friction during the customer purchasing process and make it easier for its existing customer base to transact with Dell.

Walsh suggested that Dell believes many of its existing customers already use bitcoin, and that the partnership with Coinbase simply allows the company to better serve these customers.
“I think that customer feedback was one of the reasons we started doing it. That to me says that our existing customers have been using bitcoin, so we want to make sure we’re satisfying those,” Walsh said.

His comments also suggest that Dell believes bitcoin to be a payment method on par with other, more widely used tools, as he added:
“We provide whatever payment offerings you need, whether it be your credit card or PayPal and now with bitcoin, we’re just trying to answer to customer demand.”

Extending services globally

Embracing a similar model as online travel booking giant Expedia and electronics retailer TigerDirect, Walsh confirmed Dell will initially trial bitcoin payments with only US-based customers.

However, Walsh suggested that his company is open to expanding the program, though he did not provide details about any proposals that may be in the works or what metrics Dell will evaluate before coming to this decision.
Walsh explained:
“We wanted to start up with the US base, and from that, we’ll see where we wanted to move next. The big thing here is being able to be a lot more agile in terms of addressing our customers’ needs.”

Emphasizing innovation

Walsh also framed the decision as one that would help return Dell to its roots as an innovator in technology. Throughout the conversation, Walsh emphasized how it is prioritizing innovation, and how bitcoin simply provided the latest way that Dell can show its dedication.

Walsh said:
“The first thing to provide a payment method for our business and bitcoin is a great example of how we can show some innovation. We’re always going to be looking for new, innovative ways to ensure we’re driving the right experience.”
In recent years, the company has come under fire in the mainstream financial press for failing to adjust to the decline of PC sales that has resulted from increased smartphone use.

Possibilities ahead

While Walsh gave the impression that Dell is primarily focused on bitcoin as a payments play, the company may be uniquely positioned to exploit other potential market opportunities in the space.
For example, Dell has a professional Data Center Solutions team currently working on cloud computing and optimizing hyperscale data centers, tools that could no doubt position Dell to enter or serve the now booming industrial bitcoin mining space.
Still, while Dell could have an evident competitive advantage in the space, Walsh suggested the idea is not currently on the company’s radar, saying:
“We’re familiar with [bitcoin mining]. It’s not something we’re looking at at this time, but we are familiar with it.”
Notably, Dell recently decided to shelve plans to build additional data centers in Europe, choosing instead to focus on data center management.
The company had earlier planned to purchase $1bn worth of data centers as recently as 2011.

source : http://www.coindesk.com/dell-bitcoin-aligns-brand-innovation/
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High-Performance PC Maker Alienware Adds Bitcoin Payments




Gaming computer specialist Alienware has announced that it is now accepting bitcoin payments.

The company, a subsidiary of Dell, Inc., announced the move on its official Twitter account today. In addition to the bitcoin integration, Alienware is offering a promotional discount worth up to $150 on orders purchased with bitcoin.

The decision by Alienware to take digital currency represents yet another high-profile bitcoin integration by a technology company. Alienware specializes in high-performance gaming hardware, including desktops and laptops. Originally founded in 1996, Dell later purchased Alienware in 2006.

Despite the ownership, Alienware functions with relative autonomy and focuses on a more narrow market segment.
Owing to its owner-company’s adoption of bitcoin, it makes sense that the popular gaming computer maker would tap the digital currency for payments of its own.
As the company said on Twitter:

Bitcoin’s merchant ranks swell

As with Dell, California-based bitcoin payments company Coinbase acts as Alienware’s processing partner.

Earlier this month, Dell became the largest company to date to accept digital currency payments. Like Alienware, Dell is aiming to give its new integration a boost with a 10% discount on bitcoin payments.

At the time, Dell told CoinDesk that bitcoin integration is part of the company’s commitment to responding to consumer demands. Dell sees digital currency adoption as a means of providing additional avenues to do so, saying:
“The first thing to provide a payment method for our business and bitcoin is a great example of how we can show some innovation. We’re always going to be looking for new, innovative ways to ensure we’re driving the right experience.”
source : http://www.coindesk.com/alienware-bitcoin-payments/
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Sunday, July 6, 2014

The 8 Biggest Bitcoin Heroes and Villains of 2014 (So Far)

The 8 Biggest Bitcoin Heroes and Villains of 2014 (So Far)

Bringing bitcoin to the forefront of mainstream society is no easy task.
The novelty of decentralized digital cash and the potential that bitcoin has to disrupt a variety of industries make it a polarizing entrant to the tech scene.

Bitcoin Heroes and villains

Those who believe in bitcoin’s capabilities are steadfast that the digital currency will prevail as a new kind of financial institution.
Others, similarly passionate about their beliefs, argue that bitcoin is a bubble, too volatile to amount to anything permanent in society.
For every hardworking developer, entrepreneur, investor, politician or activist fighting to bolster the bitcoin ecosystem – of which there are many – there is someone on the other side of the fence, working hard to maintain the status quo.
No matter what side you’re on, it’s safe to say that this year has been an eventful one for bitcoin.
Here are the eight biggest bitcoin heroes and villains of 2014 (so far):

bitcoin heroes

1. Marc Andreessen

marc andreessen bitcoin
flickriver.com
Arguably bitcoin’s most influential evangelist, Andreessen has put his money where his mouth is in supporting the bitcoin ecosystem.
His venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz led a $25m series B fundraising round with its investment in Coinbase in December, and the Internet pioneer shows no signs of slowing down with investments in bitcoin startups anytime soon.
Notable Quote: 

2. Barry Silbert

Barry Silbert bitcoin
cnbc.com
As CEO of asset-trading platform SecondMarket, Silbert has been working hard all year to bring bitcoin to Wall Street.
Balancing a busy schedule of rallying institutional investors, working with financial regulators in New York, and raising awareness for bitcoin with public appearances, Silbert has solidified his position as one of the digital currency’s prominent advocates.
Notable Quote: 

3. Jared Polis

Jared Polis bitcoin
bizjournals.com
It often takes the courage of a few bold risk takers to disrupt the status quo of any institution, including the US government.
Congressman Polis emerged as one of those brave figures this year when he publicly showed his support for bitcoin, and eventually went as far as vouching to fight government regulation that stifles innovation in the industry.
Notable Quote:

4. Gavin Andresen

Gavin Andresen bitcoin
squarespace.com
Even though he only spent four months of this year as the lead developer on the bitcoin core before passing the reigns to the new head dev Wladimir van der Laan, few would argue Andresen’s influence on both the technology and the community.
In his new role as the Bitcoin Foundation’s chief scientist, Andresen stays busy working as a trusted liason between the core developer community and the less tech-savy bitcoiners. As one of the few people who once had regular contact with bitcoin’s creator, Andresen has remained loyal to the betterment of the bitcoin ecosystem from its earliest days.
Notable Quote:
“Do not treat the core development team as if we were a commercial company that sold you a software library. That is not how open source works; if you are making a profit using the software, you are expected to help develop, debug, test, and review it.”

5. Ben Lawsky

Ben Lawsky bitcoin
capitalnewyork.com
Lawsky is another government official that has come into the spotlight for his involvement in the digital currency industry.
Though the impact of his work may not be as public as other heroes on the list, as New York’s superintendent of financial services, Lawsky’s progressive stance on bitcoin cannot be dismissed.
Notable Quote:
“My hope is that if we can get appropriate guardrails in place to prevent money laundering, we can take a deep breath and really focus on trying to ensure that virtual currency firms flourish and continue to develop and innovate.”

6. Patrick Byrne

Patrick Byrne bitcoin
economist.com
When Overstock.com began accepting bitcoin payments, the online retailer became the largest company to immerse itself with the digital currency.
Byrne, Overstock’s CEO, has since been very public about bitcoin’s success on the website, and recently pledged to donate 3% of bitcoin profits to bolster the ecosystem.
Notable Quote:

7. Jason King

Jason King Seans Outpost bitcoin
freedomwat.ch
As the founder of Sean’s Outpost, one of bitcoin’s most visible organizations, Jason King has dedicated himself to using the power of bitcoin to feed the homeless in his local Florida community.
In addition to providing 60,000 meals to the needy, King recently completed a cross-country fundraising run, raising awareness about bitcoin’s potential to impact charitable organizations along the way.
Notable Quote:

8. Mike Hearn

mike hearn bitcoin
youtube.com
Hearn, a well-respected bitcoin developer, has not been shy about his concerns that core bitcoin developers aren’t receiving enough support.
For bitcoin to flourish, it’s important for the protocol to constantly be improving, and Hearn’s calls to action will hopefully bring enough attention to the issue for progress to be made.
Notable Quote:
“I’ve been very worried for a long time that the core bitcoin system is radically underfunded and underdeveloped from where it needs to be.”

bitcoin villains

1. Mark Karpeles

Mark Karpeles bitcoin
dailymail.co.uk
The downfall of Mt. Gox, once the biggest bitcoin exchange in the world, affected countless people’s lives and was a blow to bitcoin’s public image.
There’s still quite a bit of uncertainty about Mt. Gox’s collapse (including some 744,000 missing bitcoins), and while Mark’s intentions may not have been malicious, it’s natural that victims of the whole ordeal will point the blame on the bankrupt exchange’s CEO.
Notable Quote:
“As the company head, my mission was to protect customers and employees. I’m deeply sorry. I’m frustrated with myself.”

2. Warren Buffett

Warren buffet bitcoin
adweek.com
Normally a shrewd businessman with a keen eye for a good investment, Buffett took a surprisingly archaic stance on bitcoin this year.
Arguing that bitcoin isn’t a currency and warning investors to “stay away” certainly didn’t help bitcoin’s reputation, and Buffett’s clout as a revered business magnate certainly influenced some to dismiss the digital currency.
Notable Quote:
“[Bitcoin is] not a currency. I wouldn’t be surprised if it wasn’t around in the next 10-20 years.”

3. Mark T. Williams

mark t. williams bitcoin
affordablehousinginstitute.org
Williams is notorious for his prediction in December 2013 that bitcoin’s price would fall 99%, leading to a price of $10 per bitcoin by June 2014.
Here we are in July of 2014, and clearly the Boston University finance professor was off with his estimates. Instead of admitting that his prediction was a bit hyperbolic, Williams remains steadfast that time will vindicate his prediction.
Notable Quote:
“I continue to stick to my 2013 prediction that bitcoin is grossly overpriced and the price will eventually adjust dramatically downward as the priced-for-perfection expectations set by bitcoin promoters cannot be met.”

4. Leah McGrath Goodman

Leah McGrath Goodman bitcoin
cbsnews.com
Newsweek pulled out all the stops in March when its cover story was revealed to be a deep investigation into the real identity of bitcoin’s creator, Satoshi Nakamoto.
Goodman, the journalist who wrote the story, pinned California resident Dorian Nakamoto as the mastermind behind the digital currency. Dorian’s personal information was leaked to the public shortly after, and Goodman held firm that her reporting was accurate, even in spite of Dorian’s denial and evidence against her claims.
Notable Quote:
“I have learned this about the fanatical bitcoiners: they will see this all in a different light once they hit puberty.”

5. Joe Manchin

Joe Manchin bitcoin
politico.com
Of course, not all politicians are as receptive to bitcoin as Congressman Polis. Enter US Senator Joe Manchin, who wrote a letter to federal regulators in February, calling for an outright ban of the digital currency.
While the bitcoin community may not be swayed so easily, news of a politician like Manchin speculating that bitcoin could hurt the US economy undoubtedly cast the cryptocurrency in a negative light for many Americans.
Notable Quote:
“There is no doubt average American consumers stand to lose by transacting in bitcoin.”

6. Jamie Dimon

Jamie Dimon bitcoin
dealbook.nytimes.com
It’s no secret that bitcoin has big banks, and their executives, a bit rattled.
Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan, was not shy about his feelings towards the digital currency this year. His company released an eight-page report bashing bitcoin in February, and Dimon made public comments ridiculing the technology.
“[Bitcoin is] a terrible store of value. It could be replicated over and over.”

7. Seng Song Cheng

Seng Song Cheng bitcoin
news.cn
China’s stance on bitcoin caused considerable uncertainty in the industry at beginning of the year. The People’s Bank of China was averse to the idea of the digital currency, but ambiguity about actual regulatory decisions led to market speculation.
Enter Cheng, PBOC’s statistics chief, who made his stance loud and clear: bitcoin should not be taken seriously.
Notable Quote:
“Bitcoin is merely a utopia for technology supremacists and absolute liberalists.”

8. Danny Brewster

Danny Brewster bitcoin
twitter.com
All eyes were tuned to Cyprus in February, where the world’s first brick-and-mortar bitcoin portal opened to offer residents bank-like services for bitcoin.

It wasn’t long until Neo & Bee, the company running the operation, faced allegations of fraud and shareholders saw the value of their holdings plummet. In the fallout, Brewster faced arrest charges as the company’s CEO, and community members felt that he had more excuses than answers about what happened behind closed doors.
Notable Quote:
“Yes, I bought a Bentley back in December, before any issues with MtGox and getting bitcoins out. Anyone that understands the price difference in cars between Cyprus and the UK they will understand exactly why I sold my own bitcoins to buy the car.”
Superhero image via Shutterstoc

source : http://www.coindesk.com/8-biggest-bitcoin-heroes-villains-2014-far/
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Predicting Bitcoin Value: Is a value of $50,000 realistic?

Bitcoin value
photo by OiMax http://www.flickr.com/photos/oimax/


World Bitcoin Network has just released a new Bitcoin Value Model. Let me begin by stating that this is a model, and no model can accurately state how much any currency is going to be worth at a point in the future. What the model can do, however, is show us how price is determined and the factors that determine it and the model can also allow us to factor in variables and view their effect.  In February of this year, the Financial Times received an eMail predicting a $50,000 Bitcoin value. Their response was to remind people that Wall Street traders use models:

“While the eMail pointing to a $50,000 bitcoin is imprecise to say the least, It’s a starting point. A more rigorous mathematical model integrating demand projections with probabilities of certain make-or-break contingencies isn’t just possible – it already exists, in various versions, across various investors’ hard drives.”

CCN
Bitcoin has, seen as an asset, outperformed almost every other asset on Earth over the past five years.

However, we cannot predict with certainty the Bitcoin value going forward simply because almost everything in the World can affect price and it is impossible to factor, anything other than a very small few of, these factors in. One of the most important factors must be Transaction Volume (The volume of bitcoins exchanged over any given period.) and today (29 June) that stands at 50,577 transactions. We must remember that someone sending themselves bitcoins, one wallet to another, will show. We must use the Transaction Volume figure cautiously. Another factor that will affect

Bitcoin value is the level of positivity of the market. If people looking at bitcoins see good news they tend to buy in, if they see bad news they tend to sell. When China dictated that the PBOC should be anti-cryptocurrency the market negativity forced the price of a bitcoin down; when Tiger.com came on board the value of a single bitcoin rose. The changes in positivity levels lead to people choosing to sell short and others to buy when they see the price as deflated and this leads to the important issue of volatility. Volatility is caused by people choosing to buy and sell bitcoins. Volatility is a significant factor in predicting Bitcoin Value going forward. Remember any currency must function as a means of exchange and also as a store of value. A volatile currency is a poor store of value, and this has led to traders accepting bitcoins to factor in a price margin to allow for volatility. This is the amount, over the dollar price, that traders charge for people choosing to pay with bitcoins.

Another important factor in predicting future Bitcoin value is the velocity, or the number of times that a unit of currency is used within a fixed period of time. Now, the lower the velocity, the higher the value. Remember, if velocity is high then that means there will have to be a higher number of transactions to achieve the total  transaction volume, as measured in fiat.  The $US has a transaction volume of 7, it is difficult to estimate the velocity of a bitcoin but it is in the 50-1oo. The next factor we must be aware of is Supply. Now, there are just under 13 Million bitcoins in circulation, but many of these may well be lost, others are held and therefore are not used for transactions. We talk about Liquidity, the ease with which an asset can be bought or sold without affecting the asset’s value. Liquidity is characterized by high levels of transaction volume. Now, if we accept that there are 13 Million bitcoins and if we assume that at least 1 Million are lost we must then look at the remaining 12 Million bitcoins and assume that a large proportion of these are hoarded by speculators, these coins are illiquid, the coins we spend and accept as payment are, on the other hand, liquid.
Remember, Gold is a great store of value, how much of that store can Bitcoin assume? More is better!

How much eCommerce can Bitcoin take up? More is better!

How much of the Global money supply can Bitcoin take up? More is better!

Black market as well as remittances,  the more, the better!

Number of bitcoins mined, the more mined, the lower the value of a single bitcoin.

Have a look and see what you think will affect the future value of Bitcoin. Will it hit $50,000 or $1 Million? You decide!

The model in use by Worldbitcoinnetwork can be found here.

source : http://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/news/predicting-bitcoin-value-50000/2014/07/06
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Saturday, July 5, 2014

Bitfin: Concluding Panel Talks Bitcoin Doomsday Scenarios

Picture 4 The concluding session of the Bitcoin Finance 2014 Conference and Expo (Bitfin) featured a wide-ranging, high-level discussion on bitcoin’s future that included prominent figures from the bitcoin world and elsewhere.

The panellists were Max Keiser, the host of The Keiser Report, which airs on Russia Today; Elizabeth Rossiello, chief executive of the Kenyan remittance company BitPesa; Rainey Reitman, activism director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a non-profit focused on civil liberties in the digital world; Jay Bregman, CEO of taxi-hailing app Hailo and Greg Brockman, chief technology officer at payments services company Stripe.

Michael Terpin, managing director of social media marketing firm Social Radius, moderated the panel, titled ‘Evolution or Revolution?’. The panellists were to discuss the question of whether bitcoin would “fundamentally change money and the global financial system”.

The empire strikes back

Perhaps the most interesting spell of discussion came towards the end of the almost hour-long session. Terpin posed the provocative question of how the “empire would strike back”. That is, how would the incumbents in the current financial system potentially limit or impede the growth of decentralised currencies like bitcoin?
Reitman, of the EFF, described a future for the cryptocurrency that would see it be gradually overwhelmed by “small bits” of regulation, rather than a dramatic, sweeping move by a government or large financial institution. She said:
“What I suspect is going to happen first is that we’re going to see small bits of regulatory pieces work their way into existing laws [...] What other little pieces of regulation are they going to stick in [that could create] particular limitations on bitcoin?”

Dangers of consumer demand

Reitman also warned that a growing demand for simplified, convenient bitcoin-based products and the entrepreneurs and investors supplying them could ironically be the death knell for bitcoin. She highlighted consumer demand for familiar financial products and the guarantees that come with them, citing debit and credit cards as examples:
“Big players trying to move into this space, offering super-simple, consumer-oriented services that offer, for example, the same kind of consumer protections that people have come to expect with debit cards and credit cards [...] would create a kind of environment that is centralised and is everything that is wrong with the existing financial systems.”
Reitman further underlined the seriousness of a consumer-driven threat to bitcoin, saying that the danger was imminent.
“I’m not talking 10 years from now. I’m talking two years from now,” she said.

Financial panic

Hailo CEO Jay Bregman painted a slightly more dramatic picture of central authorities creating a financial panic that would cause people to stop using bitcoin. He drew on his personal experience running a company that served banks during the financial crisis of 2008 as an example of the sort of widespread fear that could cause mass abandonment of the cryptocurrency.
“I was in London during the financial crisis,” he said. “I was scared and so were lots of other people … The best thing you can ever do to try and quell any large sea-change in your market is to precipitate that kind of fear. One way is to exploit holes in the infrastructure itself. You get things like Gox.”
He also described an alternative scenario where bitcoin would be allowed to grow in popularity, only to have a calamity befall it, where some central authority would ride to the rescue:
“The alternative is [...] let bitcoin get so big and then precipitate a crisis based on that. And then you say, ‘Look, this is why you need us: you need us because we’re the guys who keep finance going’. I believe that’s the thing that people should be on the lookout for.”

Keiser on bitcoin’s future

The panel also discussed more optimistic possible futures for bitcoin. When asked what he thought would be the next inflection point for bitcoin, Max Keiser said a major banking meltdown would provide an opening for the cryptocurrency; that the dollar would eventually be replaced as the global reserve currency, and that a cryptocurrency could be a candidate.
“The next battleground will be in the next major crisis in the banking sector. If you have a situation like we’ve seen with BNP being forced to pay a nine billion fine [...] that’s outright extortion,” he said, referring to the French bank BNP Paribas.
Keiser summed up the panel’s consensus that the existing financial system, centred on large banks and their business models, needed fixing.
“Banks are so tied to this business model of fraud, there is no room for legal behaviour in banking,” he said.

source : http://www.coindesk.com/bitfin-concluding-panel-talks-bitcoin-doomsday-scenarios/
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Man recovers $500,000 in bitcoins he mistakenly sent to defunct Mt. Gox

A Bitcoin user, who inexplicably threw $500,000 worth of the digital currency into the abyss last month, has managed to recover his funds.

The story starts in early June, when Reddit user TheDJFC posted about how he “messed up big time.” Explaining the blunder as a copy-and-paste error, he mistakenly sent 800 bitcoins—worth about $500,000—to the wrong digital wallet.

The Bitcoin community on Reddit verified TheDJFC’s story and helped him determine that the address where he sent the Bitcoin belonged to Mt. Gox. It’s not clear whether or not the Mt. Gox address was one that TheDJFC once controlled, but it was quite clear that the bitcoins were stuck there.

Though it was once the largest Bitcoin exchange in the world and something of a symbol of Bitcoin’s rise, Mt. Gox crashed in spectacular fashion in February, losing hundreds of millions of dollars worth of its customers’ bitcoins in the process.

On Bitcoin discussion boards, those who lost money in the crash are said to have been “goxxed,” a play on another popular term for something bad happening: “doxxed,” which means to reveal an anonymous online person’s identity by finding and posting personal details on the Internet.

TheDJFC didn’t actually get goxxed; he goxxed himself.
But alas, we all make mistakes, and no one deserves to lose half a million due to a copy-and-paste error. It was with this spirit that the Bitcoin community on Reddit advised TheDJFC to hire a lawyer to reach out to the bankruptcy trustee that’s now in charge of Mt. Gox.

After taking those steps, TheDJFC was able to recover the bitcoins, according to a comment he posted on a Reddit thread started Friday, titled “Remember the 800 BTC fuckup guy?” TheDJFC has not responded to our request for more details on the process.

The person who started Friday’s thread, Reddit user 1ruru, did so after noticing that the 800 bitcoins had moved from the Mt. Gox address earlier this week. At first it was unclear whether or not the bitcoins had been recovered, but TheDJFC’s eventual comments on the thread provided clarification.
To his credit, TheDJFC seemed to keep his composure throughout the ordeal and even managed to laugh at himself when it was all over.

“From now on, I dub thee.. ‘The Ungoxxed man,’” 1ruru wrote to TheDJFC in Friday’s thread. His reply: “I will wear that badge with pride.”


source : http://www.dailydot.com/lifestyle/800-bitcoin-recovered-mt-gox/
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