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Topic: iGotSpots Scam Dev - page 11. (Read 39716 times)

hero member
Activity: 605
Merit: 500
October 08, 2015, 12:39:28 PM
BCX is completely right about this actually. It is open source software, you can release as many versions as you want. No one is forced to mine it.

If I decide to release 1000 different flavors of an open source calculator I find on Github, would you call that a scam too?
Not at all the same thing. No one will invest or lose monetarily from your calculator.
The opposite of a scam would be honesty and integrity, and you can't say Spots ran his coins with either.
What about the lies about all of his plans to promote his coins and get merchants to accept them? He knew this was never going to happen, but he propagated these lies to encourage people to invest in his coins.

I do not know the whole story with igotspots, I would need to look more into the history to decide whether or not it was a scam . I was agreeing with what BCX posted.

Let us summarize using Merriam-Websters definition of a scam.

scam
      noun \ˈskam\
: a dishonest way to make money by deceiving people

Therefore, if no money was made in a dishonest way, just releasing 1000 different coins and not supporting them is not a scam.


Releasing 1000 coins anonymously and not supporting them is the definition of a scam you simple-minded fuck.

The implication is that he'll promise to support them and then not do so. Hence the scam.
legendary
Activity: 963
Merit: 1002
October 08, 2015, 12:34:25 PM
BCX is completely right about this actually. It is open source software, you can release as many versions as you want. No one is forced to mine it.

If I decide to release 1000 different flavors of an open source calculator I find on Github, would you call that a scam too?
Not at all the same thing. No one will invest or lose monetarily from your calculator.
The opposite of a scam would be honesty and integrity, and you can't say Spots ran his coins with either.
What about the lies about all of his plans to promote his coins and get merchants to accept them? He knew this was never going to happen, but he propagated these lies to encourage people to invest in his coins.

I do not know the whole story with igotspots, I would need to look more into the history to decide whether or not it was a scam . I was agreeing with what BCX posted.

Let us summarize using Merriam-Websters definition of a scam.

scam
      noun \ˈskam\
: a dishonest way to make money by deceiving people

Therefore, if no money was made in a dishonest way, just releasing 1000 different coins and not supporting them is not a scam.
hero member
Activity: 556
Merit: 500
October 08, 2015, 12:21:47 PM
BCX is completely right about this actually. It is open source software, you can release as many versions as you want. No one is forced to mine it.

If I decide to release 1000 different flavors of an open source calculator I find on Github, would you call that a scam too?
Not at all the same thing. No one will invest or lose monetarily from your calculator.
The opposite of a scam would be honesty and integrity, and you can't say Spots ran his coins with either.
What about the lies about all of his plans to promote his coins and get merchants to accept them? He knew this was never going to happen, but he propagated these lies to encourage people to invest in his coins.
legendary
Activity: 963
Merit: 1002
October 08, 2015, 08:31:41 AM

FYI, launching a 1000 coins and not supporting them IS NOT SCAMMING!


I am assuming this post was made to remove any doubt whatsoever that you're just a stupid cunt, smashing your thick head on the keyboard.



In order for a scam to take place, a promise, payment and non fulfillment of a promise or delivery needs to occur.

How is launching a coin and not supporting it equal a scam?


~BCX~

BCX is completely right about this actually. It is open source software, you can release as many versions as you want. No one is forced to mine it.

If I decide to release 1000 different flavors of an open source calculator I find on Github, would you call that a scam too?


Just wow  Roll Eyes

He specified he would launch them anonymously. What exactly do you think that means? The implication is that he'll promise to support them and then not do so. Hence the scam.


Quote
He specified he would launch them anonymously. What exactly do you think that means?

I think it means that he would launch them from anonymous accounts not related to his main account. What else could that mean? It is pretty self explanatory.
hero member
Activity: 605
Merit: 500
October 08, 2015, 08:27:37 AM

FYI, launching a 1000 coins and not supporting them IS NOT SCAMMING!


I am assuming this post was made to remove any doubt whatsoever that you're just a stupid cunt, smashing your thick head on the keyboard.



In order for a scam to take place, a promise, payment and non fulfillment of a promise or delivery needs to occur.

How is launching a coin and not supporting it equal a scam?


~BCX~

BCX is completely right about this actually. It is open source software, you can release as many versions as you want. No one is forced to mine it.

If I decide to release 1000 different flavors of an open source calculator I find on Github, would you call that a scam too?


Just wow  Roll Eyes

He specified he would launch them anonymously. What exactly do you think that means? The implication is that he'll promise to support them and then not do so. Hence the scam.
legendary
Activity: 963
Merit: 1002
October 08, 2015, 08:14:10 AM

FYI, launching a 1000 coins and not supporting them IS NOT SCAMMING!


I am assuming this post was made to remove any doubt whatsoever that you're just a stupid cunt, smashing your thick head on the keyboard.



In order for a scam to take place, a promise, payment and non fulfillment of a promise or delivery needs to occur.

How is launching a coin and not supporting it equal a scam?


~BCX~

BCX is completely right about this actually. It is open source software, you can release as many versions as you want. No one is forced to mine it.

If I decide to release 1000 different flavors of an open source calculator I find on Github, would you call that a scam too?
hero member
Activity: 605
Merit: 500
October 08, 2015, 08:00:19 AM

~BCX~





Wishful thinking. I was there in the polo box saw the whole thing go down and so did many others. Don't forget polo has your ass whenever they want it. Sleep tight  Roll Eyes

By the way, launching 1000 coins knowing you're not going to support them is absolutely a scam. His statement was that he would launch them anonymously, so you wouldn't know it was his coin and that it would be unsupported. Either way, the intent to scam is clear. How stupid are you people or do you just enjoy defending known scammers?

It's no surprise seeing one shitbag defending another one
hero member
Activity: 546
Merit: 500
AKA The Rubber Monkey
October 08, 2015, 07:56:09 AM
In order for a scam to take place, a promise, payment and non fulfillment of a promise or delivery needs to occur.

That's simply breach of contract (or on this case it would be an implied contract). The issue that nobody is addressing is intent. The breach must be made with intent to defraud in order for it to be a scam.

Also, his statement that he would launch 1000 coins and not support any of them takes any implied contract off the table for all subsequent coins (unless he turns around and implies that he will support a particular coin) because he stated up front that he would not support them.

If anybody has significant damages as a result of his actions (or lack thereof) there is probably sufficient grounds for a lawsuit, but there's no grounds for criminal prosecution.
sr. member
Activity: 365
Merit: 300
October 08, 2015, 12:49:04 AM
In order for a scam to take place, a promise, payment and non fulfillment of a promise or delivery needs to occur.
~BCX~

I gave you an example of exactly that and you dodged it by making up some fine print bullshit of your own definition of 'lifetime'. Laughable.

How is launching a coin and not supporting it equal a scam?

When you have a constant one trick pony history of doing it.

When you vow to release 1000 anonymous clones onto the market, premine them, shill them until they have sucked in enough noobs then dump them and start again, how in the blue fuck is it not a scam in your little mind?

See, I think any dev that starts a coin, dumps then abandons it is a scammer. Spots just does it with every coin he clones.. 'devs'.

Anyway, I am done arguing the definition of 'scammer' with you, you're clearly a spots suckhole which means you are most probably in on all of the premines and scams yourself.








hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 500
October 07, 2015, 10:04:41 PM
Just wanted to let you know that you shouldn't buy iGotSpot's coins. He is extremely immature and locks his topic when someone accuses him of what he actually does. He took 5BTC when he suddenly closed Gorilla.exchange  Sad

I'm no moderator, but shouldn't this be in the scam accusations thread? Or would this primarily be considered an altcoin problem ? Can't help but ask.
legendary
Activity: 1210
Merit: 1024
October 07, 2015, 09:57:19 PM

FYI, launching a 1000 coins and not supporting them IS NOT SCAMMING!


I am assuming this post was made to remove any doubt whatsoever that you're just a stupid cunt, smashing your thick head on the keyboard.



In order for a scam to take place, a promise, payment and non fulfillment of a promise or delivery needs to occur.

How is launching a coin and not supporting it equal a scam?


~BCX~
sr. member
Activity: 365
Merit: 300
October 07, 2015, 09:30:30 PM

FYI, launching a 1000 coins and not supporting them IS NOT SCAMMING!


I am assuming this post was made to remove any doubt whatsoever that you're just a stupid cunt, smashing your thick head on the keyboard.





legendary
Activity: 1210
Merit: 1024
October 07, 2015, 08:34:06 PM
my new goal will be to release 1000 coins anonymously. Fuck all of you assholes. Whenever you see a coin launched from here on out, there is a 98% chance it will be from me, and I will not support any of them

No, no proof whatsoever.  Roll Eyes

Not that anyone should expect BitcoinEXpress to even know what a scam or a scammer is. He's the Mensa award winner that confirmed his identity on the Poloniex trollbox, then proceeded to DDOS the exchange and admit to it. Afterwards he started backtracking and deleting his posts like a little bitch when someone informed him he committed a federal crime.

It's no surprise to see one shitbag scammer defending another one.

@AdamWhite

Not sure why I am asking you but are you really this confused on what a scam is?

FYI, launching a 1000 coins and not supporting them IS NOT SCAMMING!

Let's move on shall we.

First I didn't ddos poloniex and no one confirmed anything.

Secondly, Poloniex themselves have stated they were not ddos'd in the time period you are talking about.

But I digress and ask

Are you really that stupid?


~BCX~


hero member
Activity: 605
Merit: 500
October 06, 2015, 01:41:13 PM
I've never DDOSed anyone and haven't even used Polo for well over a year lol where do you get these lies? It's incredible the amount of things you think I've done. You should write a fantasy book with that imagination of yours

Quote
Not that anyone should expect BitcoinEXpress to even know what a scam or a scammer is. He's the Mensa award winner...
legendary
Activity: 2548
Merit: 1054
CPU Web Mining 🕸️ on webmining.io
October 06, 2015, 11:27:10 AM
I've never DDOSed anyone and haven't even used Polo for well over a year lol where do you get these lies? It's incredible the amount of things you think I've done. You should write a fantasy book with that imagination of yours
hero member
Activity: 605
Merit: 500
October 06, 2015, 07:31:19 AM
my new goal will be to release 1000 coins anonymously. Fuck all of you assholes. Whenever you see a coin launched from here on out, there is a 98% chance it will be from me, and I will not support any of them

No, no proof whatsoever.  Roll Eyes

Not that anyone should expect BitcoinEXpress to even know what a scam or a scammer is. He's the Mensa award winner that confirmed his identity on the Poloniex trollbox, then proceeded to DDOS the exchange and admit to it. Afterwards he started backtracking and deleting his posts like a little bitch when someone informed him he committed a federal crime.

It's no surprise to see one shitbag scammer defending another one.
legendary
Activity: 2548
Merit: 1054
CPU Web Mining 🕸️ on webmining.io
October 05, 2015, 09:50:38 PM
Guess it's worth mentioning that while BCX is correct, and that was clearly stated when you purchased your 6-month staking cycle, of which everyone got well over 6 months out of, that I upgraded for free. Not to mention bringing everyone into the new system..

Quote
Cloud Staking is Back
Which brings me to the next update.. Cloud Staking has returned! All GorillaStake users will receive a Private Key valid on both PrimeChain (PRIME) and Primality (PRIMAL) blockchains. While sales will not be open to new customers at this time, previous users of Cloud Staking have not been forgotten and will receive this key for free!

Source: http://primechain.website/primality/
legendary
Activity: 1210
Merit: 1024
October 05, 2015, 07:57:51 PM

Post some proof or STFU.

Show where he intentionally offered a service, commodity or coin for an agreed upon price, took the money and didn't deliver what he "sold" you.


Even though its on this very page and has been listed at least a dozen times before in this thread... I'll take into account that I am dealing with an absolute fucking moron so here you go, again..

Lets forget all of the tricks he pulled while merging nearly every coin he's made, premines, swaps, deleting anything not part of his fan club in his moderated threads, abandons and threats to release a thousand new scam coins just so you can concentrate on something simple.
What's your opinion on the lifetime staking contracts that he collected money for but will not honour? Not a scam at all?

See that red shiny bit? Let me know when that simple one sinks in to that thick forehead of yours and we can move onto the long list of 'others'.

I look forward to your next captivating contribution where you again claim that you cant see any proof and spotted dick still tastes yummy.










Merging coins, deleting comments and being an asshole is not being a scammer.


Also if I remember correctly "Lifetime" referred to the service life of the coin, not anyone person.


Additionally, Spotted Dick is awesome!


How's that!



~BCX~

sr. member
Activity: 365
Merit: 300
October 05, 2015, 09:13:33 AM

Post some proof or STFU.

Show where he intentionally offered a service, commodity or coin for an agreed upon price, took the money and didn't deliver what he "sold" you.


Even though its on this very page and has been listed at least a dozen times before in this thread... I'll take into account that I am dealing with an absolute fucking moron so here you go, again..

Lets forget all of the tricks he pulled while merging nearly every coin he's made, premines, swaps, deleting anything not part of his fan club in his moderated threads, abandons and threats to release a thousand new scam coins just so you can concentrate on something simple.
What's your opinion on the lifetime staking contracts that he collected money for but will not honour? Not a scam at all?

See that red shiny bit? Let me know when that simple one sinks in to that thick forehead of yours and we can move onto the long list of 'others'.

I look forward to your next captivating contribution where you again claim that you cant see any proof and spotted dick still tastes yummy.






hero member
Activity: 546
Merit: 500
AKA The Rubber Monkey
October 02, 2015, 10:12:59 PM
It simply indicates there was a deficit between your perceived skill in investing and reality.

Oh, it's more than that, but I agree with you that it's not a "scam." That word seems to be everyone's favorite word, but it's usually misused. Most "scams" in crypto are the result of incompetence and negligence, but the intent was honest. It's a moot point however. The end result is the same.

Maybe people will finally learn and try doing some research before throwing their money away, but I doubt it.
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