Author

Topic: Alanay's Bank Service (Read 587 times)

sr. member
Activity: 364
Merit: 250
October 18, 2016, 04:38:17 AM
#10
I require a picture of yourself and your ID before I give you a loan. go and do more home work because this idea does not appear interesting because an investment must have a purpose and long life span but your appear to be short lived and rely more on other peoples money for survival and you will be borrowing them back when and if you survive.
hero member
Activity: 1008
Merit: 500
October 17, 2016, 08:25:36 PM
#9
Scam!!!! He only wants to steal bitcoin on some people. Why dont you try to look for a good job.
No one will gonna believe you.
member
Activity: 92
Merit: 10
October 17, 2016, 05:14:01 PM
#8
Where are the funds invested to, or how can you get the profits? Can't be from loans as you don't have a backup plan in case you don't get any volume.

Seems scammy.
full member
Activity: 161
Merit: 100
October 17, 2016, 02:35:40 PM
#7
The amount I profited from it was around $5.00, and it is still unavailable to me as Bitcoin Core catches up with network. The amount does matter, and the people matter.

Talking about your profit is disingenuous as the cost of the scam to yourself is irrelevant. If you believe that the precise amount is so important then surely the amount you embezzled ($412) is significant, not how much of that is left.

If you see $10 on street and take it, you're still stealing from somebody but for some reason you wouldn't be called a thief.

One would not be called a thief because in most jurisdictions keeping something of so little value is not a crime. On the other hand, defrauding players of hundreds of dollars is a crime in virtually every jurisdiction. Developing a non-functioning gambling site, advertising that site as functional and keeping all deposits made to it requires significantly more criminal intent than keeping an abandoned bank note, so do not equate the two.

You don't understand, I didn't mean profit. I made $5, not $412. That was a joke. I was under no obligation to return funds and so there was nothing criminal about it. I just did a bad things which I won't do again.
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
October 17, 2016, 01:26:02 PM
#6
The amount I profited from it was around $5.00, and it is still unavailable to me as Bitcoin Core catches up with network. The amount does matter, and the people matter.

Talking about your profit is disingenuous as the cost of the scam to yourself is irrelevant. If you believe that the precise amount is so important then surely the amount you embezzled ($412) is significant, not how much of that is left.

If you see $10 on street and take it, you're still stealing from somebody but for some reason you wouldn't be called a thief.

One would not be called a thief because in most jurisdictions keeping something of so little value is not a crime. On the other hand, defrauding players of hundreds of dollars is a crime in virtually every jurisdiction. Developing a non-functioning gambling site, advertising that site as functional and keeping all deposits made to it requires significantly more criminal intent than keeping an abandoned bank note, so do not equate the two.
full member
Activity: 161
Merit: 100
October 17, 2016, 12:55:51 PM
#5
My negative trust will be changed soon, as the people I scammed in the past are being paid back. The profit of the scam was only $5 so it's nothing to worry about.

Previously you claimed that you stole $421, not that it matters much. The fact that you stole at all is more significant than the amount you stole.

The amount I profited from it was around $5.00, and it is still unavailable to me as Bitcoin Core catches up with network. The amount does matter, and the people matter. If you see $10 on street and take it, you're still stealing from somebody but for some reason you wouldn't be called a thief.

Every kind of business requires trust, I am not going to risk the little money I do have by giving people loans without them investing first. You can believe this is a scam if you want but it is not and you are free to leave.
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
October 17, 2016, 12:49:42 PM
#4
My negative trust will be changed soon, as the people I scammed in the past are being paid back. The profit of the scam was only $5 so it's nothing to worry about.

Previously you claimed that you stole $421, not that it matters much. The fact that you stole at all is more significant than the amount you stole.
full member
Activity: 161
Merit: 100
October 17, 2016, 12:38:22 PM
#3
Since what you're doing is exactly taking and giving loans, doing this on the lending sub forum might make more sense.

Not sure if your negative trust is going to convince anyone to deposit money with you though...

Can a moderator move this to "Lending" please?

My negative trust will be changed soon, as the people I scammed in the past are being paid back. The profit of the scam was only $5 so it's nothing to worry about.

We can invest 0.02 and request a 0.02 loan, why would anybody do that?

Sometimes you want to keep your money away so you don't gamble, and sometimes you may be in need of a loan. Since you would have already invested with me you'd have my trust plus I'd have your ID and photo.
legendary
Activity: 1120
Merit: 1038
October 17, 2016, 12:35:13 PM
#2
Since what you're doing is exactly taking and giving loans, doing this on the lending sub forum might make more sense.

Not sure if your negative trust is going to convince anyone to deposit money with you though...
full member
Activity: 161
Merit: 100
October 17, 2016, 12:32:02 PM
#1
Investing -

You must invest at least 0.01 BTC, maximum is 1 BTC until I start earning more.

You can invest for 5 days for 0.5% interest, or 10 days for 1.25% interest, your BTC is not withdraw-able during this time.

Loaning -

After you have invested at least 0.02 BTC, you may request a loan of up to 0.02 BTC.

Loans can be paid back within 5 days with 5% interest, or in 10 days with 7.5% interest.

I require a picture of yourself and your ID before I give you a loan.

-

PM me for instructions on how to invest or take out a loan.
Jump to: