Bitcoin Won't Be the Dark Web's Top Cryptocurrency For Long (cnet.com) 79
Bitcoin has essentially become the poster child for cryptocurrencies, and that's a problem for cybercriminals dealing on the dark web. From a report: Researchers from Recorded Future, a threat intelligence company, looked through 150 of the dark web's top marketplaces and forums and found that bitcoin's boom is driving shady characters away from the cryptocurrency. The rise of bitcoin has brought cryptocurrency -- digital alternatives to government-issued money -- to the mainstream, enticing people who are looking to get rich quick. Last December, bitcoin hit its all-time high at nearly $20,000, but it has since slumped and as of Thursday is trading at a little over the $8,000 mark. But before it was a massive investment that millionaires bought, it was the dark web's currency of choice, thanks to its decentralized and anonymous structure.
Nothing to do with transaction fee.. (Score:5, Insightful)
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THIS!!
also, with the value always climbing, everyone wanted to keep the bitcoins for a few more weeks, so they value would increase... now they do not want to sell because they are probably losing money and spend it is still to expensive
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My last one just yesterday was closer to $2.50, so no, they aren't.
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Exactly. When you're doing Dark Web stuff $50 non negligible amount of money. You could pay a crackhead to bumrape someone for that, or buy some heroin or get a Saturday night special. Or half to two thirds of a pony.
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XPP - Partial Pony has been volatile recently.
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Funny you made that comment just when the fees went back down [earn.com], and soon Lighning.Network [gaben.win] will put a definitive end to the problem.
Unlike other coins (and fiat), Bitcoin actually leaves more traces for authorities to track. Darkcoin (renamed Dash) and a few others are trying to address that.
These could be important if a government, such as China, becomes hostile to cryptocurrencies.
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Not Anonymous (Score:5, Interesting)
"...the dark web's currency of choice, thanks to its decentralized and anonymous structure."
Decentralized, yes, anonymous... not quite so much.
Every single transaction of bitcoin is recorded, and the record stored in the blockchain. It's "anonymous" nature relies on you keeping your bitcoin wallet isolated from your identity. Which may be possible. Or, with enough sorting through transactions and linking transactions to actual individuals, may not be.
Re:Not Anonymous (Score:5, Interesting)
Or, with enough sorting through transactions and linking transactions to actual individuals, may not be.
THIS! People think cryptocurrency is a way to trade money secretly and anonymously. And it can be, but the fact remains that if you use the same wallet over and over and don't take precautions to remain secret you will be found.
This is no different that the drug dealer who gets caught by the IRS for owning 20 Ferrari's and only reporting 10K of income. It takes work to remain anonymous and launder your money.
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And it can be, but the fact remains that if you use the same wallet over and over and don't take precautions to remain secret you will be found.
Yeah.... that's what I expect will eventually drive certain groups to coins such as AEON and MONERO; which conceals what the address is that receives coins; You need a wallet's View-Key to even see what the balance of a particular wallet is..... whereas with Bitcoin; you can see all the transactions related to any wallet, and you can see the balan
Monero (Score:4, Informative)
Maybe you should read up on Monero. It was designed to be anonymous.
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With all the money government intel and law-enforcement agencies are putting into connecting the dots, Bitcoin is a big honking trap. It not just help finds scofflaws, but proving that someone did a transaction by showing how secure the blockchain is, makes convictions inevitable.
This makes me wonder who Satoshi was. The fact that early adopters received a lot of perks (cash for transactions, ease of mining without specialized hardware), while the people coming in have a substational equipment and energy
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None of the really smart law enforcement want to tell the other side or their own corrupt staff the "how" of collect it all.
Law enforcement like to tell the media that they gave a bad person a million US$ and watched the money move around the bad banking world.
Not that collect it all had the crypto to all their banks in real time for the past decades.
Governments like to map out all the bad people, see who has skills, who is evil, who is political, who is g
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Clearly a shill for Dogecoin (Score:5, Funny)
Clearly, the author is a shill for Dogecoin.
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Laugh all you want, but Dogecoin has been a consistent performer for years now.
=Smidge=
bitcoin always sucked (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyone who has spent even a small amount of time looking into crypto-currencies would know that Bitcoin is the most traceable, least anonymous, highest priced, transaction fees are super high, half the time it takes multiple hours for the transaction to go through, if at all. Anyone who wants real anonymous transactions would think about using Monero, or something like it.
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Monero may have an encrypted blockchain, but its transaction fees are nearly as ridiculous as Bitcoin's.
Markets are crashing, tulip farms burning (Score:3, Insightful)
Look, you're going to be regulated.
In China they're executing bitcoin traders.
It's a thing.
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The most amazing thing is you don't realize the non-statist people you idolize are the worst statists ever.
You'll learn.
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I checked, it's not a thing.
I could find no mention of any executions.
http://fortune.com/2018/01/17/... [fortune.com]
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Ah I was waiting for that tulip comment. Please explain how similar tulip bulbs and bitcoins are.
I hear there's a newsletter you can subscribe to.
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The good ole days (Score:1)
When the REAL internet commerce was pr0nz collections!
Don't Worry Dark Webbers! (Score:3)
The price of Bitcoin is less than 1/2 of what it was at the beginning of the year. And falling. At this rate, it will soon be cheap enough for you to use, once again, to pay for heroin, weapons, human slaves and contract murders. In the meantime, I'm pretty sure you'll be OK using personal checks..
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100% of the time if someone claims they are a hitman it really means they are a cop.
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Still double what it was six months ago.
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Yeah, but you bought it around Christmas.
Stop misleading people! (Score:3)
thanks to its decentralized and anonymous structure.
Inaccurate. It's the exact opposite of anonymous. Every transaction is recorded, from the beginning of bitcoin's existence.
Only one answer... (Score:5, Funny)
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That was *great*!!!
ROTFL!!!
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Basic to asic, I liked his comp, with "two fans like a Charger game!"
All cryptocurrency ultimately in same boat... (Score:2)
Sure, people can identify technical flaws/merits of different cryptocurrency, but when all is said and done, the fate of all of them is tied together.
If Bitcoin ultimately fails, it'll bring the whole decentralized cryptocurrency concept with it. The non-technical aspects are more relevant to a currency and all the cryptocurrencies are approximately the same on that front: not vaguely representative of anything concrete nor backed by any organization. Sadly, the consensus of the people is fickle and lacks
Currency (Score:2)
Currency? I thought it was gamb... I mean, investing?!
Bitcoin isn't the wave of the future. (Score:2)
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Bitcoin is proof of work, and will remain so. New bitcoin production will end one day, but mining will not - the miners will switch from creating bitcoins to locking the blockchain.
Where do you think the transaction fees go? They don't disappear - they simply go to the miners who lock the block in, and more is made now on transaction fees than on making new bitcoin. It's how the network is supposed to
Pseudonymous NOT Anonymous (Score:1)
Bitcoin was designed for anonymity not value (Score:1)