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Topic: [CLOSED] GLBSE drama - page 6. (Read 17878 times)

member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
October 08, 2012, 11:20:38 PM
#78


First you say to calm down and that all our coins are safe and to be returned imminently.  Now you say we'll have to wait on a lawsuit.  Which is it then?

The answer is, "Only Nefario has a say in the matter, at this point".

legendary
Activity: 966
Merit: 1000
October 08, 2012, 10:18:45 PM
#77
In that case you'll have to wait till the partners sue nefario for destroying all the value of glbse. Because for damn sure it wasn't us who shut it down and confiscated everyones bitcoins.

First you say to calm down and that all our coins are safe and to be returned imminently.  Now you say we'll have to wait on a lawsuit.  Which is it then?
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 500
Wat
October 08, 2012, 10:03:53 PM
#76
sr. member
Activity: 574
Merit: 250
October 08, 2012, 09:30:20 PM
#75
Quote
1.  Theymos wants to sell
2.  Theymos states that GLBSE wants to be legitimate

So what do you call it when someone is trying to sell shares of an illegitimate business?

Enron.

Sounds worthy of a scammer tag to me.  Bitcoin will never get anywhere as long as the chief reason prominent members of the community want to exit a business is because it won't be illegal anymore.


Thats not the only reason people were selling. Personally I decided to sell after nefario unilaterally deciding to screw asset issuers by booting them off glbse.

Before he did that I was quite willing to become a legal registered shareholder and I believe the IRC logs of bitcoinglobal bear this out.

I think the better option would have been to keep the current glbse site but run it underground and start a new, legal company to begin the process of setting up a compliant entity and I said this numerous times to people involved.

Im not responsible for the actions of anyone else in the partnership. Just as Im not responsible for paying their tax  Tongue

Luckily it is not a tax. It is about receiving value in trust and then destroying the value of it. If I take fiat wealth to a bank and deposit it to my account and the bank manager burns up all the records and says "tough shit, no money for you!" the ownership of that bank, all of the ownership of that bank remains liable for my deposit.

You are exactly responsible for all actions taken by your business partners in connection with the business that you own with them. That's why they have different forms of business operation. If you wanted to operate as a limited liability organization, then you should have organized as such. If you wanted to have a managing partner who controls all actions of the partnership, you should have formed the partnership with that understanding.

You didn't. In either of those cases.

Anyone reading the shareholder rules for GLBSE will see that this was a closely held entity, with very specific and stated shared responsibilities. You were enjoined from selling share without majority agreement, you were prevented from taking action without majority agreement, you had set schedules and rules for everything, and now lalala it magic, none of the rules apply? You even had formal partnership meetings- where the owners, all of the owners, considered such business as came before them.

If nefario fucked all of you owners by his actions, the correct action is not to say "I'm out, I didn't do it." The correct thing to do is to take action against the partner who is fucking you, and your shared partnership. There is no jurisdiction in the world that will accept your statement of not being responsible because you didn't agree. You are responsible. Just as responsible as nefario if you are an owner. And when claims are made, and prevail in court, you will not be liable in proportion to the ratio of your shares, each of you will be responsible in full until all claims are satisfied. That's the other side of business ownership, its a little thing called responsibility. Pretty much a missing concept around here, but a reality none the less.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
October 08, 2012, 09:28:24 PM
#74
We have a backup system that is completely independent of MtGox's backup system. The system mirrors backups globally within an hour of the backup, which is done daily.

Good to hear. Thanks for the info. What's the contingency plan in case of domain interference by regulatory entities, as mentioned by another poster earlier in the thread?
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 500
Wat
October 08, 2012, 09:20:07 PM
#73
Every asset creator and every shareholder has complete grounds to bring claims against theymos, nefario and all other "owners" of GLBSE jointly and severally for all the on-going damage and losses they are causing by their refusal to take action, for their irresponsible communications that lead to near-failure of the market before the no-notice shutdown, and for the criminal retention of all sums sent to be used in the market where the exchange THEY OWN took those funds in trust for the trading activities of the various entities involved

Nefario registered the glbse domain and servers using his credit card so in the eyes of the legal system no other "owners" exist and how would you work out "damages" in either case ?

I highlighted the magic phrase for you.  Each of you is responsible for full recompense.  You can either pay it all yourself and rest easy, or hope that people pay according to their share.  At the end of the day, n things must be distributed, and if  < n have actually been distributed, everyone gets their asses handed to them.

Since it's multi jurisdictional, the weight falls heaviest on those local to the plaintiff.


It still doesn't answer how you come to a damages figure in the first place.

But even so its a case of getting blood from a stone  Sad
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 500
Wat
October 08, 2012, 09:15:21 PM
#72
Quote
1.  Theymos wants to sell
2.  Theymos states that GLBSE wants to be legitimate

So what do you call it when someone is trying to sell shares of an illegitimate business?

Enron.

Sounds worthy of a scammer tag to me.  Bitcoin will never get anywhere as long as the chief reason prominent members of the community want to exit a business is because it won't be illegal anymore.


Thats not the only reason people were selling. Personally I decided to sell after nefario unilaterally deciding to screw asset issuers by booting them off glbse.

Before he did that I was quite willing to become a legal registered shareholder and I believe the IRC logs of bitcoinglobal bear this out.

I think the better option would have been to keep the current glbse site but run it underground and start a new, legal company to begin the process of setting up a compliant entity and I said this numerous times to people involved.

Im not responsible for the actions of anyone else in the partnership. Just as Im not responsible for paying their tax  Tongue

donator
Activity: 151
Merit: 100
Assholier-than-thou retard magnet
October 08, 2012, 09:11:18 PM
#71
Every asset creator and every shareholder has complete grounds to bring claims against theymos, nefario and all other "owners" of GLBSE jointly and severally for all the on-going damage and losses they are causing by their refusal to take action, for their irresponsible communications that lead to near-failure of the market before the no-notice shutdown, and for the criminal retention of all sums sent to be used in the market where the exchange THEY OWN took those funds in trust for the trading activities of the various entities involved

Nefario registered the glbse domain and servers using his credit card so in the eyes of the legal system no other "owners" exist and how would you work out "damages" in either case ?

I highlighted the magic phrase for you.  Each of you is responsible for full recompense.  You can either pay it all yourself and rest easy, or hope that people pay according to their share.  At the end of the day, n things must be distributed, and if  < n have actually been distributed, everyone gets their asses handed to them.

Since it's multi jurisdictional, the weight falls heaviest on those local to the plaintiff.
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 500
Wat
October 08, 2012, 09:05:15 PM
#70
legendary
Activity: 1204
Merit: 1015
October 08, 2012, 09:01:31 PM
#69
MtGox *does* the hosting, in other words, they can read your PMs.

So if MtGox gets shutdown, the Bitcoin community will lose its main exchange as well its main source of communication?
Yes, but for at most a few hours of downtime and with up to 24 hours of posts lost. We have a backup system that is completely independent of MtGox's backup system. The system mirrors backups globally within an hour of the backup, which is done daily.
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
Look upon me, BitcoinTalk, for I...am...Rarity!
October 08, 2012, 08:53:53 PM
#68
Quote
1.  Theymos wants to sell
2.  Theymos states that GLBSE wants to be legitimate

So what do you call it when someone is trying to sell shares of an illegitimate business?

Enron.

Sounds worthy of a scammer tag to me.  Bitcoin will never get anywhere as long as the chief reason prominent members of the community want to exit a business is because it won't be illegal anymore.
sr. member
Activity: 574
Merit: 250
October 08, 2012, 08:46:42 PM
#67
What a delightful collection of deep orange ignore brothers and sisters I find here! Far from being the mark of shame that anyone is embarrassed about, or a guide for the discerning reader to know who had the respect of the community or not, I personally find the brighter the orange, the most interesting a person's post will be. All the orange means is that the fragile little porcelain egos that hide behind a desire to have someone else do their thinking for them have gotten frightened or offended by what they have seen, and rather than engaging in healthy conversation, they have a lovely automatic function do their thinking for them.

Cowardly and weak in the extreme.

But, I digress, let's consider theymos as scammer, shall we?

He tried to bail out of the sinking ship as he saw it headed towards the regulatory rocks.
An interesting ethical choice at best.

He used insider knowledge to assemble a 25% stake, and offered a significant ownership block for a healthy price.
Shrewd business move, and without the benefit of hindsight, a smart investment move for somebody who believes in bitcoin and markets.

He washed his hands of all responsibility the moment that nefario (I spit and use hand gestures to ward off evil when I type that name!) decided to move unilaterally in a new direction with the company.
Weak, very weak, and not absolving of responsibility in the slightest.

Scammer tag? In the real world- absolutely yes. In the extremely warped world of bitcoin ethics? Probably not.

Still has significant legal and financial responsibility to the people who have suffered severe losses due to the mismanagement of the company of which he controls a 25% interest? Without question. Although the criminal bastards behind bitcoinica have tried to create a precedent that clicking your heels three times and saying out loud "I am no longer responsible" somehow magically releases you from all obligation, it doesn't. Every asset creator and every shareholder has complete grounds to bring claims against theymos, nefario and all other "owners" of GLBSE jointly and severally for all the on-going damage and losses they are causing by their refusal to take action, for their irresponsible communications that lead to near-failure of the market before the no-notice shutdown, and for the criminal retention of all sums sent to be used in the market where the exchange THEY OWN took those funds in trust for the trading activities of the various entities involved. It is not their money to hold, nor is it their money to invest in lawyers for the benefit of nefario alone, or to pay for regulatory games being played by anyone.

But the call has been made- let's let the authorities who review these things do their work.

Maged- what say you? Does he get a scammer tag for his involvement in this? Do the other owners of GBLSE get the scammer tag for the exact same reasons as nefario?

hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 500
Wat
October 08, 2012, 08:44:59 PM
#66
They could also insure the vetted companies' clients and shareholders against this kind of failure.

The premiums would be out of reach of most small businesses, members.  Just think of how much such an organisation would have had to pay out from the failures which have happened this year alone.  Its in the millions. 

The last time I did consulting in the area (2005ish), Sarbanes-Oxley cost the average company $5m/year.


Someone selling shares in their BFL single is surely going to pay 5 million a year to submit the correct paperwork.  Roll Eyes
legendary
Activity: 2072
Merit: 1001
October 08, 2012, 08:42:08 PM
#65
Quote
1.  Theymos wants to sell
2.  Theymos states that GLBSE wants to be legitimate

So what do you call it when someone is trying to sell shares of an illegitimate business?

A love business up for auction.
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 500
Wat
October 08, 2012, 08:40:21 PM
#64
Quote
1.  Theymos wants to sell
2.  Theymos states that GLBSE wants to be legitimate

So what do you call it when someone is trying to sell shares of an illegitimate business?

Enron.
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
Look upon me, BitcoinTalk, for I...am...Rarity!
October 08, 2012, 08:36:32 PM
#63
Quote
1.  Theymos wants to sell
2.  Theymos states that GLBSE wants to be legitimate

So what do you call it when someone is trying to sell shares of an illegitimate business?
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 250
October 08, 2012, 08:23:08 PM
#62
Not to mention that they are both on US ICE-vulnerable GTLDs.

Time to start using Retroshare.


legendary
Activity: 966
Merit: 1000
October 08, 2012, 08:13:36 PM
#61
They could also insure the vetted companies' clients and shareholders against this kind of failure.

The premiums would be out of reach of most small businesses, members.  Just think of how much such an organisation would have had to pay out from the failures which have happened this year alone.  Its in the millions.  

The idea being that the vetting process itself would protect the insurer against having to pay out, and more importantly, keep the company on the up-and-up so that it does not fail in this way.
hero member
Activity: 868
Merit: 1000
October 08, 2012, 08:10:41 PM
#60
They could also insure the vetted companies' clients and shareholders against this kind of failure.

The premiums would be out of reach of most small businesses, members.  Just think of how much such an organisation would have had to pay out from the failures which have happened this year alone.  Its in the millions. 
hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
October 08, 2012, 08:06:07 PM
#59
Did anyone even make a serious offer to purchase the GLBSE shares?  I know in the thread about it most people thought the asking price was overvalued.  To me the initial post was just an information post and that offers were to be made privately through PM or by email.  It is in those negotiations that other information would come up, especially that Theymos was not only selling his own shares but also acting as a broker to sell other shares held by other people.

Unless an actual person that wanted to purchase the shares comes forward, I think this scammer accusation is not valid.

Also, anyone that did not see the end coming is not looking far enough down the road and needs to rethink their prowess in estimating how much a business is worth.

1.  Theymos wants to sell
2.  Theymos states that GLBSE wants to be legitimate
3.  GLBSE removes any asset associated with Goat without the approval of the board.
4.  SEC investigator contacts many people and asks about GLBSE.
5.  Nefario stating that he is talking to lawyers.

I also think anyone that talked to Nefario privately for the last 2 weeks could see his frustration in managing GLBSE.  I am sure he would agree that coding GLBSE is much easier than dealing with the legal and people aspect of it.
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