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Bitcoins

Holy Fuck, I have 2 bit-coins! I thought I was broke, but this thread made me curious of what I had in Mt Gox. I just checked. I have almost two grand in bitcoins. Woofuckingwhoooo!

I am going to buy some shit!
 
Holy Fuck, I have 2 bit-coins! I thought I was broke, but this thread made me curious of what I had in Mt Gox. I just checked. I have almost two grand in bitcoins. Woofuckingwhoooo!

I am going to buy some shit!

We accept!

Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk
 
We accept!

Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk


Mt Gox is confirming my account. I had to send them pictures, ID, and a utility bill. They say it takes 20 days. Then, it is quite possible that I might get some peps from you guys.
 
Mt Gox is confirming my account. I had to send them pictures, ID, and a utility bill. They say it takes 20 days. Then, it is quite possible that I might get some peps from you guys.

PM when your ready bro!

Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk
 
By the way, why the fuck does MT Gox require a fucking utility bill now? I have been using them for years. I have over 20 transactions. I don't like having to send shit like utility bills to a money exchange just to have access to MY FUCKING MONEY that has been in that exchange for years.
 
By the way, why the fuck does MT Gox require a fucking utility bill now? I have been using them for years. I have over 20 transactions. I don't like having to send shit like utility bills to a money exchange just to have access to MY FUCKING MONEY that has been in that exchange for years.

That's interesting. Fastcashforcoins could probably answer that

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Muscle Gelz Transdermals
IronMag Labs Prohormones
Mt Gox is confirming my account. I had to send them pictures, ID, and a utility bill. They say it takes 20 days. Then, it is quite possible that I might get some peps from you guys.

i can put coins in your pocket right now. and i dont need or want any ID, utility bills, etc etc etc
 
That's interesting. Fastcashforcoins could probably answer that

Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk

its all about the anti-money laundering act.

this, and lengthy transaction times, are the problems you will run into with the major bitcoin exchanges like mtgox

its infinitely easier, safer, and more anonymous to just purchase bitcoins from an individual

such as myself, plug plug lol
 
its all about the anti-money laundering act.

this, and lengthy transaction times, are the problems you will run into with the major bitcoin exchanges like mtgox

its infinitely easier, safer, and more anonymous to just purchase bitcoins from an individual

such as myself, plug plug lol

Interesting

Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk
 
its all about the anti-money laundering act.

this, and lengthy transaction times, are the problems you will run into with the major bitcoin exchanges like mtgox

its infinitely easier, safer, and more anonymous to just purchase bitcoins from an individual

such as myself, plug plug lol

Do they have different rules for Bitcoins? I thought the laundering act was for transactions over $10,000...
 
Do they have different rules for Bitcoins? I thought the laundering act was for transactions over $10,000...

basically the anti-laundering act requires currency exchanges and money services (like ace cash express, moneygram, western union, paypal, etc) to verify the identity of their customers.
 
basically the anti-laundering act requires currency exchanges and money services (like ace cash express, moneygram, western union, paypal, etc) to verify the identity of their customers.

Western Union doesn't require a utility bill though, how is that even an ID? I could spoof a utility bill easily, and what if you live off-grid with no utility bill...fuck them that's just stupid hoops to jump through....they act like they are verifying credit or making a payday loan....

Someone should castrate them and make them choke on their own balls....
 
Western Union doesn't require a utility bill though, how is that even an ID? I could spoof a utility bill easily, and what if you live off-grid with no utility bill...fuck them that's just stupid hoops to jump through....they act like they are verifying credit or making a payday loan....

Someone should castrate them and make them choke on their own balls....

its nothing more than the government cracking down on mt.gox

mtgox themselves didnt decide to begin that shit lol they were forced into under threat of another legal battle
 
Article

In Bitcoin I trust | Fox News

The big online retailer Overstock.com now accepts payment in Bitcoin. That's good news for lovers of liberty because Bitcoins give us an alternative to government-controlled money. Bitcoins are a currency created by anonymous, private tech nerds, not by government.
Governments don't like competition, and our government sometimes bans competing currencies. But as more of us use Bitcoins, and more businesses accept payment in Bitcoin, it becomes harder for government to dismiss the currency as illegitimate, or ban it.
'Bitcoins are not controlled by anybody.'​
- Mercatus Center senior research fellow Jerry Brito

There are two advantages to Bitcoin.
First, it's harder to trace transactions back to people who make trades. I don't particularly care about that, because at the moment, I don't hide anything from my government. But I do fear government destroying the value of my dollars by printing more of them, the way governments in Germany before World War II and in Zimbabwe in recent decades did, forcing people to make trades using wheelbarrows of nearly worthless bills.
Given how my government spends money, and the way the Fed enables this by buying trillions in government bonds, I fear my dollars may someday be worth pennies. So I bought Bitcoins. Bitcoins are digitally created -- or "mined" -- at a slow, fairly predictable rate. An incomprehensible (incomprehensible to me, anyway) computer algorithm limits their number.
"Bitcoins are not controlled by anybody," explained Mercatus Center senior research fellow Jerry Brito on my TV show. "It's a new Internet protocol, like email or the Web ... a digital, decentralized currency that allows you to exchange money with anybody in the world fast and cheaply without the use of a third party like PayPal or Visa or MasterCard."
I bought Bitcoins even though I don't understand how Bitcoin mining works. I also worry that someone will hack into my Bitcoin account and steal my money, or maybe hack into the whole system and devalue Bitcoins by creating millions of new ones.
But risky as this new currency may be, I still trust it more than I trust politicians. When my fellow baby boomers demand our promised Medicare payments and discover that government promised trillions more in benefits than it can ever pay for, I assume politicians will print dollars until they are nearly worthless.
So, I put my savings into Bitcoins when they sold for $140 each. I was late to buy -- smarter people bought for much less. But today each Bitcoin is worth more than $800. So, yippee for me! I'm so glad I put all my savings into Bitcoins. OK, I didn't really. It's just part of my savings -- but it's good to hedge against political venality!
The biggest risk to private currencies may be that governments will become jealous of how well these upstart forms of money work. If people all over the world decide to trade in digital currencies, it will become more obvious than ever that government isn't what makes economic activity happen.
It will also be harder to trace -- and tax -- people's economic activity. Government doesn't like to get sidelined. To its credit, the German government announced that it recognizes Bitcoin as a legal alternate currency.
The U.S. government flexed its muscles by warning that it has the right to regulate Bitcoin transactions. The FBI already shut down a website called Silk Road that accepted Bitcoins as pay for services both legal and illegal (like drugs). Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., called Bitcoin "money laundering" and demanded a crackdown. That's not surprising, since Schumer wants to ban lots of useful things, like energy drinks, high-frequency stock trading, free-market wages and 3-D printers that can make guns.
So I'm glad Overstock.com and other businesses are out there, reminding people that law-abiding citizens use Bitcoins to buy legal things. Last month, I used them to buy Christmas gifts. But Bitcoin's legitimacy shouldn't depend on whether people do things with it that politicians consider wholesome.
When government restricts drugs, online gambling and other popular activities, it just makes anonymous, hard-to-trace currencies more popular.

John Stossel joined Fox Business Network (FBN) in 2009. He is the host of "Stossel" (Thursdays at 9 PM/ET), a weekly program highlighting current consumer issues with a libertarian viewpoint. Stossel also appears regularly on Fox News Channel (FNC) providing signature analysis.

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