Pages:
Author

Topic: Drugs, weapons, terrorism tips and sickening child porn (Read 3062 times)

hero member
Activity: 812
Merit: 1000
things like Silk Road might turn the public opinion negative towards bitcoin

i think SR turning public opinion negative towards bitcoin is about as likely as TOR turning public opinion negative towards the Internetz.
hero member
Activity: 812
Merit: 1006
To be fair, "despicable criminality" is the *ONLY* economy for which bitcoin is currently the best and easiest mode of non-face-to-face commerce.  I love bitcoin and hope it goes mainstream, but speaking objectively, Silk Road is a very good application of bitcoin, pgp, trust rating networks, etc. and it has probably done more good for bitcoin than harm.

Silk Road may have done lots of good for bitcoin, but it might be that in the longer run it will turn into harm. There are lots of us, who want to use bitcoin for legitimate commerce - and things like Silk Road might turn the public opinion negative towards bitcoin. However I hope that won't be the case, and people will understand that technologies like bitcoin can be used both for good and bad (whatever your definition of good and bad is...)
legendary
Activity: 1358
Merit: 1002
So, they admitted in print that they bought drugs and got them on the mail... interesting, to say the least.
How many laws did they admit to break on there? WTF. That journalist isn't very smart.
hero member
Activity: 504
Merit: 502
I'm not personally interested in the Silk Road, but if I were, I wouldn't be able to help reading this as a massive positive advert:

Quote
Within minutes we entered the Dark Web and ordered HEROIN and COCAINE as easily as shopping on eBay.

Days later the drugs arrived in the post.

Translation: "Yes, that's right -- the drugs arrived.  The totally immoral drug dealer supplied what they said they'd supply and you, the purchaser didn't have to sully your hands dealing with an frightening underworld that you know nothing of."

Once you remove the writers inherent assumption of disapproval, what he wrote is an endorsement.

Also: to be able to buy these "samples" as a test; the journalist has to have obtained some bitcoins.  I wonder how long it will take for the ease of use of bitcoin to penetrate the Sun-dwelling troll's psyche.  Ignore the product, think of how efficiently it was purchased...
hero member
Activity: 793
Merit: 1016
To be fair, "despicable criminality" is the *ONLY* economy for which bitcoin is currently the best and easiest mode of non-face-to-face commerce.  I love bitcoin and hope it goes mainstream, but speaking objectively, Silk Road is a very good application of bitcoin, pgp, trust rating networks, etc. and it has probably done more good for bitcoin than harm.
legendary
Activity: 947
Merit: 1042
Hamster ate my bitcoin
The 'Sun' is read by idiots that believe any fear mongering BS that is fed to them.
hero member
Activity: 668
Merit: 501
pathetic. both the article and the comments.
Quote
the people responsable should be shot for attempting to ruin peoples lifes over the internet
this quote tells me more about the writer of this comment then he is aware.
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
"A shock Sun investigation discovered the secret internet zone"?
 
Hardly.
 
Wired magazine did a piece on silk road on 1st June 2011, titled "Underground Website Lets You Buy Any Drug Imaginable", and there has been a wikipedia page about it since 11th June 2011, titled "Silk Road (marketplace)".

BBC Radio did a segment on Silk Road and the Dark Web earlier this year (Feb 5th) https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?&topic=1958.msg734973#msg734973 so they are not even the first UK source. I'm also sure that The Guardian has done a piece.

marked
sr. member
Activity: 369
Merit: 250
so pointless not even worth reading. the sun sucks.
hero member
Activity: 632
Merit: 500
I taught $US was the money of choice between criminals.

Glad that Bitcoin took this spot!  Grin
legendary
Activity: 2940
Merit: 1330
"A shock Sun investigation discovered the secret internet zone"?
 
Hardly.
 
Wired magazine did a piece on silk road on 1st June 2011, titled "Underground Website Lets You Buy Any Drug Imaginable", and there has been a wikipedia page about it since 11th June 2011, titled "Silk Road (marketplace)".
legendary
Activity: 1896
Merit: 1353
Quote
sickening child porn

I suppose they have another adjective for child porn that is not sickening?
legendary
Activity: 2506
Merit: 1010
Quote
Buyers use a legal virtual currency called Bitcoins,

Well at least the press is qualifying it properly nowadays.

Quote
which the website launders through a string of fake transactions to hide their origin.

And properly describes how it is not Bitcoins themselves but in how they are used (laundered to hide origin) that is where the problem comes about.
legendary
Activity: 1470
Merit: 1029
Death to enemies!
If more the ruling system is angry, then even more I'm satisfied. Well done DPR.
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 500
They are just trying to give bitcoin a bad name and hang it.
legendary
Activity: 1386
Merit: 1003
Looks like another opportunity to say: The silk road rules.  Keep up the good work enabling medical freedom and keeping people out of the dark web of prescription narcotics and powerful drug pushing monopolies!

True.  Maybe (in the Murdock way) he is just trying to promote the Silk Road as this article will bring new customers to bitcoin and the Silk Road for sure.......  so next time he pays hackers he can use bitcoin and leave less of a trail to follow. 
legendary
Activity: 1264
Merit: 1008
Looks like another opportunity to say: The silk road rules.  Keep up the good work enabling medical freedom and keeping people out of the dark web of prescription narcotics and powerful drug pushing monopolies!
legendary
Activity: 1386
Merit: 1003

The UK gutter press has decided to release an article about 'silk road' although it is not named directly.

Bitcoin is name as the currency of choice for the worlds most despicable criminals.

Here's the url: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/4232399/Deadly-drugs-for-sale-in-online-universe-called-Dark-Web.html

I guess we can look forward to a lot more fear mongering like this.


Coming from a Murdock paper this is not unexpected. Murdocks people pay hackers to break into peoples voicemail, they pay hackers to give out cracks to competing cable networks.   On top of that, this particular paper is the "national enquirer" of the UK.


http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-Issues/2012/0330/Murdoch-empire-faces-new-scandal-potentially-far-more-damaging
legendary
Activity: 2058
Merit: 1431
Can't read anything

HTTP Status 503 - 503 Server temporarily busy, please try again in a short while
works fine for me
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 500
Can't read anything

HTTP Status 503 - 503 Server temporarily busy, please try again in a short while
Pages:
Jump to: