hero member
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I'll make a brief response:
Unlike Apple and MS, a bitcoin service often holds significantly clients funds. If you purchase a software or hardware product from Apple or MS, you hand over your money and get the product in return. If you're not happy with it, you return the product and get your money back. You don't deposit large funds with these companies, and they can't run off with large funds of yours, like a bitcoin service can.
Now, a medium/large bitcoin service that holds client funds are no safer than the people running the show. Therefore, knowing whether the persons involved have a history of scamming, unethical behaviour or have been brought to court before is of high interest to investors.
Let me take a direct example:
Bruce Wagner was at one point one of the most outspoken persons in the bitcoin community. He advertised heavily for 'MyBitcoin'. We all know how that went. Now, I haven't seen any clear evidence of connection between him and Mybitcoin, however, it was later revealed that he was involved with Bold Funding, an operation that simply sucked money out of people about to lose their homes on promises to help them with saving their homes. His involvement in this operation was not known widely when he first started to get involved in bitcoin.
Financial magazines and journals quite frequently holds a tab on conmen and scammers, if someone that's been involved in scams earlier is starting something similar again, it's in the public interst to be educated about it.
Also, the more money you invest with an unregulated, uninsured institution, the higher your trust level needs to be.
Making public doziers about 'vital' bitcoin people may be stretching it, but surely checking out criminal records and any 'interesting' connections may be worthwhile checking out.
I'm pro bitcoin, and I want things to happen in an orderly fashion, that's all.
If it was found that 2 out of 3 founders of a bitcoin company has a very questionable past, would you rather know this before depositing funds, or would you prefer to be ignorant of this fact ?
Of course, we could say that each client/customer is responsible for his own actions and completely ignore that there's a community that everybody should care about and work to make better, but I think it's every community members distinct moral obligation to tell if he knows about something that could potentially wreck havoc with a bitcoin service. Bitcoin won't stand or fail because of single failures, but if we can avoid it, I think we should focus on attempting to avoid things like this happening again in the future. It's in the interest of the community and in the interest of public relations.
With all the fairly recent scams that took place, that's what people are picking up when they read articles about bitcoin, and that's what journalists write about, but it seems like the tide has changed now, and let's hope it continues to go our way.
People who are critical and ask hard questions should be praised, not ridiculed. While I don't care much what people say online, some people may, and therefore they may be reluctant to speak their minds.
If a service is run by a person that has a shady history, and you because of that avoid that service, then you will tell yourself, "Great, I didn't invest with them", when they eventually get 'hacked' or just vanish. And you will be thankful towards the community that pointed this out to you in advance.
Now, don't get me wrong, people have to think for themselves and do their own risk assesment, but having some more information about persons that run the show in a unregulated, uninsured market, I can't see what's wrong with that.