Salty -
I guess if we are trying to get rid of the philosophy of ponzis, and get straight to the question, does Dooglus owe anyone money?
That depends on the jurisdiction of a court in which litigation is potentially taken against dooglus, as well as the tort laws in such jurisdiction, however I would err on the side of "
yes".
The allegation in the OP is that dooglus (helped) create a product that was designed to ultimately steal from others. This means that anytime any ponzi operator had previously used his script to steal money from others, that he would likely be considered to be an accomplice to such theft. According to
this, there is no distinction between an accomplice and the person who actually commits the tort, although it is likely that the accomplice would not be liable for 100% of the damages.
A Gun Manufacturer can
potentially (Page 2, last paragraph), be held liable if they
knowingly sell a gun to someone they know will subsequently use said gun to commit a crime of violence (or a drug trafficking crime).
A bartender can be potentially held liable if s/he knowingly (or should have known) servers a drink to a drunk person, and said drunk person subsequently kills someone while driving while still drunk.
Both of the above examples are very similar to dooglus creating a product whose only potential use is to eventually scam people.
MRKLYE -
Additional Notes: Any amount of clam no matter how trivial has a chance to stake.. SO your point on your additional note isn't valid.
It has a chance to stake, however the chance is not very high with small amounts of CLAM in a wallet/address.
P.S. Going after people on this forum that have been proven trustworthy with over 60M worth of bitcoin for giving a buddy a hand with some code is pure fucking faggotry,
Oh, so just because someone has been trusted with a lot of money in the past, they should be given a free pass in being able to do whatever they want in the future....you should vote for Hilary.
Slandering others doesn't make you more credible, It just makes you look like an upset child.
Slander? What have I said here that is incorrect? Please point it out
The answer to all of the above:
I don't have time to hold your hand and explain to you the finer points of logic and thinking at the moment, you obviously need a new hobby other than trying to cause a commotion on the internet, because if you think we'll forget how much of a turd in the punch bowl you are if you accuse everyone else of being shit you are sadly mistaken.
So in other words, you are unable to point out any lie I have said in this thread, and you have no response to my other points. Good to know.
whywefight -
As far as i know (assuming the topic would be still a live) a PSA would be posted and everyone advertising or supporting the ponzi after that will be tagged. Thats how CD does it and its posted
here how it works.
--snip--
Want me to post an PSA in that thread??
A prerequisites of someone receiving negative trust, or the community being warned about nefarious behavior/activity is not a PSA being posted in some thread. Someone cannot say that they never saw the PSA that says stealing is not allowed and as a result they shouldn't get negative trust for not repaying a loan they took out. If you stole money, or in this case, helped people steal money, then you should be labeled a scammer, period. You either stole money (or helped people steal money), or you didn't, there is no "I didn't know this isn't allowed".
suchmoon -
However even by those "extremely liberal" standards, and even assuming that some other newbie user had done the same thing - it doesn't appear that a neg trust would have been posted. There was no PSA and there was no actual support for the ponzi, quite the contrary.
Someone posting a PSA saying that others in the community should not do or post something does not make whatever the subject of the PSA a scam. There is nothing that would stop someone from writing a PSA that says that anyone who thinks the sky is blue, and if such a (ridiculous) PSA was posted, anyone who posts they think the sky is blue would not automatically be a scammer. If you are caught driving 65 MPH on a highway in which the speed limit is only 55 MPH, you cannot present a defense on the basis that you
thought the speed limit was 65 MPH (if you do, it would be ignored by the judge/court). Writing a PSA might be helpful to educate people who might otherwise not know they are about to "break the law", however it is not necessary to post such a PSA prior to someone being guilty of a crime.
I'm not aware of any DT1-2 member negging coders for making changes to open source software that might be used for scamming but I'm sure someone will let me know if I'm wrong.
That is an awfully specific example you are looking for, however there was essentially the same example posted in
#2 of this thread:
Well...people have gotten Negative Feedback's for writing scripts for Ponzi's (example BSM)
BSM received negative trust from both Cryptodevil and Lutpin for selling a ponzi script (that he created).
here (
archive --
archive prior to the OP being deleted/edited to nothing), and
here (
archive is where BSM admitted to creating a ponzi script that he was trying to sell.
In this case, dooglus took open source script, made some changes to it, creating a new script (that is based on the prior script), and published it for
anyone to download and use. The main difference is that dooglus is offering his ponzi script for free while BSM was trying to sell it.
redsn0w -
Dooglus doesn't support ponzis... he only fixed some bug in that code
The particular script that dooglus worked on was having problems, apparently to the point that the script would send money back to an incorrect address. Dooglus edited the script so that it would send money to the correct address (or so he claimed). In other words, before dooglus helped, any potential ponzi operator that wanted to use that script would not be able to run a ponzi, and after dooglus finished helping with the script, such ponzi operator would be able to run a ponzi.