What gets me the most, is this "Disclaimer" they put up on the BTGold official website,
the very moment we all got our coins stolen, and they quietly removed the link from their site, all without an official announcement to save other users from the same pitfall, mysteriously. You'd think that they'd want to avoid other users getting scammed by putting out an urgent announcement, alongside the removal of the link. But nothing yet that I've seen. The lack of an official announcement plays nicely into the idea that they're very much okay with this sort of thing happening, or having happened, and have no intentions to get ahead of this like a normal group of developers would in light of this:
Disclaimer: the Bitcoin Gold Organization (bitcoingold.org) cannot take responsibility for third party providers, such as the listed exchanges, wallets, sites and pools. All links hosted on our domain are by community members and third parties and by clicking on any of the listed links you are accepting the risks of using the third party domain and taking responsibility for any losses, damage or other issues using said domain. Crypto-currencies are inherently risky and investors and users must remain vigilant.
Putting the blame back on us. Which is fair: we share some blame. But in this case, I'm pretty sure they're the robbers telling us we should've kept our stuff locked up because it's 'a dangerous world out there'.
Moreover, for those here saying "why would they do this when they've got a coin with a billion dollar market cap?", etc:
I couldn't tell you. Greed? Because so far, we could pose that question against things we
know that they already did. Like:
"Why would they need a premine when they've already got a coin with a billion dollar market cap?"
"Why did they let tens of thousands of miners
premine for them, without ever saying that this is what was happening for an entire day after the launch of the official mainnet?" Hell, if it wasn't for a tweet from Suprnova, I wouldn't have known. I was sitting there watching my coins mature, and then disappear, and not a word from them about this. Not a notice on mine.pool.gold. Nothing. Others were equally surprised. I mined like $50 for those guys without knowing it. So why would they need to do that, if they've already got ... ?
... you get the point. I hope that the coin soon outgrows these devs, but the more I look into and research this, the more I genuinely believe that there's very little chance the btgold team isn't at *least* in collusion with the guy / folks that took our coin.
And bear in mind, I am
not someone who's against these forks. I think they're a healthy and exciting part of the ecosystem, to be honest with you. A potential chance for us later comers to experience the same growth some of you folks did who joined up in 2011 or 2013. But now, with Bgold, I'm split. The better it does, the better I know the scammer, or scammers, are doing, too. I'm still excited about the idea, but it's hard to support them (current devs) after what very much appears to be something they're kind of a part of. I didn't want to believe it, but every reputable crypto person out there was saying that these guys were probably in this for the money; and though they got a bit more sophisticated since that accusation, it may very well have been true after all.