Author

Topic: Is Theymos anonymous? (Read 7392 times)

hero member
Activity: 764
Merit: 500
I'm a cynic, I'm a quaint
December 03, 2015, 09:41:19 PM
#66
First of all... Holy mother of necros!

Ok, that out of the way... In the years that this forum has been operating Theymos has failed to pull of any scam that caught our attention. I am sure opportunity has stared him in the face many times. I declare him to be the most inadequate scammer I know.

Not scamming when presented with opportunity to do so generally shows a person can be trusted, though it is no guarantee.
sr. member
Activity: 266
Merit: 250
Invulner
December 03, 2015, 07:59:12 PM
#65
Theymos is unlikely to be Michael Maquardt. There is no info available on the net of that name.
full member
Activity: 121
Merit: 100
December 03, 2015, 07:50:05 PM
#64
Theymos is not anonymous.

A quick search will give you his name and other info about him. He is also working on other projects so is probably very busy with them. He does have several websites that he runs eh twitter so it is probably best of you contact him directly to one of these accounts.
sr. member
Activity: 392
Merit: 251
December 03, 2015, 04:31:55 PM
#63
We already know what Theymos' name is :3

Trade Fortress doxxed him, if anyone was quick enough to read the dox, they'd know who Theymos is.

Why do you want to know who Theymos is? We should respect his choice of privacy!
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
December 03, 2015, 08:26:46 AM
#62
Trade Fortress actually doxxed Theymos.
Not quite, AFAIK he just compiled info which was publicly available.

He attempted to post to where in the blockchain Theymos' dox is. It didn't allow him to post an autobanned him instead. But doxes are allowed Roll Eyes
legendary
Activity: 2492
Merit: 1018
December 03, 2015, 08:00:17 AM
#61

I see this as somewhat an accusation to Theymos.  Shocked
I think it would be crazy for someone to actually put  same password for your bitcointalk account and your hot wallet. That would be a crazy thing to do the fact that anyone who is determined to really access the forum server can always do, be it by force or not.

TradeFortress is a different story.
legendary
Activity: 2352
Merit: 1268
In Memory of Zepher
December 03, 2015, 07:47:20 AM
#60
Trade Fortress actually doxxed Theymos. That's why he's banned.
Fairly sure he just posted an existing dox which was on the internet, but was just banned from this forum.

I think he paid for donator just to change his name, lol Cheesy
TF has been donator since long before I even joined, probably at least 3 years at this point (if not more).

Theymos is pretty much known as Satoshi's first mate
Eh, I'd say that Gavin got closer to Satoshi as he was entrusted with continuing the project as a whole and with the Alert Keys to the project.

he's basically the admin of bitcoin.
He's the admin of a lot of the Bitcoin community (BCT & r/bitcoin), not Bitcoin its self.
hero member
Activity: 924
Merit: 1005
4 Mana 7/7
December 03, 2015, 05:57:40 AM
#59
Trade Fortress actually doxxed Theymos.
Not quite, AFAIK he just compiled info which was publicly available.
Theymos is pretty much known as Satoshi's first mate
IIRC Satoshi chose theymos because of his technical know-how, and maybe that he trusted him. But I don't think satoshi would've thought that the forum would grow into what it currently is
Edit:
he's basically the admin of bitcoin.
Owh hell no
legendary
Activity: 1232
Merit: 1030
give me your cryptos
December 03, 2015, 05:54:37 AM
#58
Trade Fortress actually doxxed Theymos. That's why he's banned. I think he paid for donator just to change his name, lol Cheesy

Theymos is pretty much known as Satoshi's first mate, he's basically the admin of bitcoin.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1185
dogiecoin.com
December 03, 2015, 04:52:27 AM
#57

Has Theymos (the person who runs this forum) ever revealed any personal info about himself? Do we know his name, where he lives, etc? Is the real person behind the Theymos handle an active member of the community apart from on this forum and on reddit?

Gavin Andresen follows him on twitter.  One tweet.  Come on Michael, some more effort would be nice https://twitter.com/theymos
who is the one guy He is following ? @Simpsonsvault , I doubt it is an imposter made it in 2012.

It was a Simpsons streamer.
hero member
Activity: 553
Merit: 500
December 03, 2015, 03:02:18 AM
#56

Has Theymos (the person who runs this forum) ever revealed any personal info about himself? Do we know his name, where he lives, etc? Is the real person behind the Theymos handle an active member of the community apart from on this forum and on reddit?





Gavin Andresen follows him on twitter.  One tweet.  Come on Michael, some more effort would be nice https://twitter.com/theymos
who is the one guy He is following ? @Simpsonsvault , I doubt it is an imposter made it in 2012.
legendary
Activity: 812
Merit: 1000
December 03, 2015, 01:43:08 AM
#55

Has Theymos (the person who runs this forum) ever revealed any personal info about himself? Do we know his name, where he lives, etc? Is the real person behind the Theymos handle an active member of the community apart from on this forum and on reddit?





Gavin Andresen follows him on twitter.  One tweet.  Come on Michael, some more effort would be nice https://twitter.com/theymos
legendary
Activity: 966
Merit: 1004
Keep it real
November 21, 2013, 08:32:01 AM
#54
bumping.

Why?  The OP has already been answered.
member
Activity: 102
Merit: 10
Crypto Pros
November 21, 2013, 06:11:40 AM
#53
bumping.
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1280
May Bitcoin be touched by his Noodly Appendage
November 14, 2013, 04:24:13 PM
#52
^^encrypt sensitive PM's always with PGP!  Tongue

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=pm;sa=send

Quote
Note: PM privacy is not guaranteed. Encrypt sensitive messages.
that doesn't excuse theymos's behavior. he knows what I'm talking about Wink but maybe he has an explanation.
Seems legit
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 14, 2013, 07:37:10 AM
#51
false can easily be used to drop price by 25% or more.

It'd get picked up instantly on the dev IRC and handled promptly, refer to what happened in march.

And even if it didn't, the price wouldn't drop in five minutes by some random number you just pulled out of your ass. People actually reading the notification, seeing past the bullshit would see an opportunity to buy the coins dropped by the clueless panic-sellers.

Lurk more, think harder.
member
Activity: 102
Merit: 10
Crypto Pros
November 14, 2013, 07:26:38 AM
#50
^^encrypt sensitive PM's always with PGP!  Tongue

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=pm;sa=send

Quote
Note: PM privacy is not guaranteed. Encrypt sensitive messages.
that doesn't excuse theymos's behavior. he knows what I'm talking about Wink but maybe he has an explanation.
legendary
Activity: 2856
Merit: 1520
Bitcoin Legal Tender Countries: 2 of 206
November 14, 2013, 07:23:41 AM
#49
^^encrypt sensitive PM's always with PGP!  Tongue

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=pm;sa=send

Quote
Note: PM privacy is not guaranteed. Encrypt sensitive messages.
member
Activity: 102
Merit: 10
Crypto Pros
November 14, 2013, 07:03:18 AM
#48
false can easily be used to drop price by 25% or more.

sell before alert
send alert
buy after alert before price rebounces
claim you were hacked.

well written copy. pick your choice

1) backdoor found in windows binary of bitcoin-qt
2) bitcoin core devs arrested for assisting money laundering
3) ECSDA attack found, all bitcoins unsafe.

this will drop the price instantly, good well written authentic copy will do tons of damage.

now theymos be accountable and explain why you read so many PMs without a legitimate reason for reading them
If you don't answer with a good response and apologize, I will post evidence and it's not going to be pretty

little bit of proof.. be more honest about justmoon/moongate's admin account password reuse on another forum Wink
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 14, 2013, 01:59:16 AM
#47
hero member
Activity: 784
Merit: 1000
November 13, 2013, 08:58:24 PM
#46
I'm not a sociable guy. There are few people in the Bitcoin community who I have any sort of casual relationship with. AFAIK, I've met a grand total of two forum users AFK.

You live in a bubble and want to determine how a whole community should trust each other?

Time for a reality check!

He is just a kid with a lot of power (over the forum) and now a lot of wealth (in real life).

Clearly his moral actions have been questioned in the past but over all I think he does a pretty good job considering. I think he tries to do good but it does not always work out that way. I understand that guy.

But still I think my point about "default trust" being confusing at best is valid.




do you guys talking about thermos?  Grin

Hi, welcome from reddit!

His power is not limited to this forum, he has the Bitcoin-qt alert key as well.

True and at reddit. But over all I don't think he has abused his power (in any significant way that i know of) and we all fuck up here and again.



Had he been yet another global moderator I would have considered him to be exceptionally good Wink, but he has much greater power so more responsibility should be expected from him.

Back on topic: since he is in control of the alert key, it is indeed sensible that he should retain a degree of intransparency lest he is to be the target of some personal threats, unless it can be proven that he has used his power in irreconcilably wrong ways.
hero member
Activity: 784
Merit: 1000
November 13, 2013, 08:29:18 PM
#45
I'm not a sociable guy. There are few people in the Bitcoin community who I have any sort of casual relationship with. AFAIK, I've met a grand total of two forum users AFK.

You live in a bubble and want to determine how a whole community should trust each other?

Time for a reality check!

He is just a kid with a lot of power (over the forum) and now a lot of wealth (in real life).

Clearly his moral actions have been questioned in the past but over all I think he does a pretty good job considering. I think he tries to do good but it does not always work out that way. I understand that guy.

But still I think my point about "default trust" being confusing at best is valid.




do you guys talking about thermos?  Grin

Hi, welcome from reddit!

His power is not limited to this forum, he has the Bitcoin-qt alert key as well.
legendary
Activity: 2856
Merit: 1520
Bitcoin Legal Tender Countries: 2 of 206
November 13, 2013, 04:18:02 AM
#44
is Stefan Thomas and Jed McCaleb still in "Behind Bitcoin" or are they outlawed because of Ripple.com?

And how about Vladimir and his club?

 Cool
newbie
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
November 12, 2013, 05:28:34 PM
#41
do you guys talking about thermos?  Grin


L/\/\FAOOOO!!!!  Wink  x1O
newbie
Activity: 56
Merit: 0
November 12, 2013, 04:49:26 PM
#40
If he is, is he also legion?
legendary
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
November 12, 2013, 04:06:05 PM
#39
I believe Theymos is one of my neighbors. He lives somewhere near me anyway. But if he wishes to remain private, then I'm with him.

I'm all for respecting privacy. Pretty much everyone one here will agree unless someone scams.

Agreed.  Smiley
legendary
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1147
The revolution will be monetized!
November 12, 2013, 03:57:23 PM
#38
I believe Theymos is one of my neighbors. He lives somewhere near me anyway. But if he wishes to remain private, then I'm with him.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
November 12, 2013, 01:05:22 PM
#37
I heard Theymos lives in some kind of Bitcave.
vip
Activity: 756
Merit: 504
November 12, 2013, 12:46:02 PM
#36
I'm not a sociable guy. There are few people in the Bitcoin community who I have any sort of casual relationship with. AFAIK, I've met a grand total of two forum users AFK.

Your misunderstanding of how the trust system works is one reason why you are not in DefaultTrust.

You live in a bubble and want to determine how a whole community should trust each other?

Time for a reality check!
legendary
Activity: 2198
Merit: 1989
฿uy ฿itcoin
November 12, 2013, 12:21:02 PM
#36
This kind of wizard?

legendary
Activity: 2856
Merit: 1520
Bitcoin Legal Tender Countries: 2 of 206
November 12, 2013, 12:44:40 PM
#35
do you guys talking about thermos?  Grin
legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1003
November 12, 2013, 12:09:53 PM
#34
I always thought Theymos was a wizard of some sort.
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1015
November 12, 2013, 08:26:57 AM
#33
Quote
You forgot about the $50,000 he gets each week for ad revenue.

The guy must be absolutely rolling it in right now!

Unless he hands out blowjobs while off duty there is no fuckin way this site generates that kind of revenue. Esp per week. That's the dumbest thing I've heard anyone ever say. Don't go around telling people that.

I don't see any doubleclick tags in the site serving me a premium ad. I barely see any ads. And they aren't ads tracked in the traditional fashion (CPM/CPC/affiliate/ etc).  Simple plain HTML ads with an external link. This cannot generate the amount of ad revenue you claim.

And even if he is making bank good for him. Stop
Hating.
When TF was buying, each ad cycle could earn well over $50K, but now it's more like $10K per week. ~25% goes to mods (and part to himself, I think?). The rest goes into the forum treasury of ~5.6KBTC (>$2M). You're apparently doing ad revenue wrong. Tongue

https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/advertise-on-this-forum-round-98-301062
b!z
legendary
Activity: 1582
Merit: 1010
November 12, 2013, 08:08:59 AM
#32
I've been a professional software developer for almost 10 years, I have a pretty decent idea of what it takes to run a site using someone else's forum software.

No offense, but your statements say otherwise. Hint:

Quote from: go1111111
-Bitcointalk uses Javascript. It is well known that a lot of members here will be on bitcointalk and on their favorite web wallet site at the same time. There may be some XSS opportunity here, though as I said I'm not an expert.

And so 90% of the internet, also you have no understanding of XSS. Can you please stop posting your "expert" opinions please? Because that's simply dumb.

Also Theymos was doxed, google it.
Doxed? No. He put his information online. http://theymos.com
hero member
Activity: 896
Merit: 532
Former curator of The Bitcoin Museum
November 12, 2013, 05:40:17 AM
#31

I'm not a security expert, but if Theymos did want to be untrustworthy, it seems like he's in a better position to do harm than a lot of people:

-Bitcointalk uses Javascript. It is well known that a lot of members here will be on bitcointalk and on their favorite web wallet site at the same time. There may be some XSS opportunity here, though as I said I'm not an expert.

-There are some small % of newb/dumb bitcointalk forum members who probably use a similar password on bitcointalk and on their favorite web wallet. It seems possible that Theymos could somehow get access to people's bitcointalk passwords if he wanted, giving him or his friends a huge password cracking advantage over a random person.

A few small bits of info that I found mildly concerning, and caused me to be curious about Theymos:

-Theymos seems to have been a defender/supporter of TradeFortress. It's possible that they are friends, but I'm not sure. The circumstances around 1 million dollars disappearing from TradeFortress's inputs.io business suggest that TradeFortress may be very shady.

-There are a lot of people on reddit who pop up with stories about how funds were stolen from their hot wallets because they didn't have 2-factor authentication, and they describe having pretty complex passwords. It's somewhat of a mystery how their passwords are being cracked.

-The fact that Theymos allegedly raised like $600k for this forum, yet the forum is not that good technically, is sort of weird and makes me wonder how much of that was actually spent on the forum.

I'm not saying we should suspect Theymos of any nefarious activities, but the above is just why I care more about Theymos's trust level than I care about a random user's.

 

You forgot about the $50,000 he gets each week for ad revenue.

The guy must be absolutely rolling it in right now!
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 12, 2013, 05:08:31 AM
#30
but i have to say to never test the doj/fbi/cia/nsa. they will shred you! i've seen them pull some very elaborate schemes. you're only safe in russia and china. you cannot fight the doj/gov. they will own you.

See, you finally have a valid point. If you pursue your reasoning, based on the assertion you made, and with which I fully agree, the correct course of action becomes clear : don't test them, don't do shit that'll get you on their radar.

If you think you're safe using PGP in PMs you're wrong, they'll own the forum, exploit your browser, exploit your machine through some zero-day and use it a side channel to pull the keys from your machine and work from there. Not saying that PGP is broken, just saying a technical protection measure is never a security silver bullet, they could entrap you, they could use black bag cryptanalysis or whatever they do to get their shit done.

There's already tons of fun and interesting stuff to do legally, be safe and let others get in trouble.

newbie
Activity: 33
Merit: 0
November 12, 2013, 04:00:44 AM
#29
theymos reads a lot of PMs, and not for a good reason.
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 12, 2013, 03:28:56 AM
#28
First of all no software development was done here.

That has already been said had you read the thread before proceeding to give me a good laugh.


When it comes to fine tuning the performance

Lurk more, it's not about performance.


if i can sustain a single website on 33 server cluster running a custom build of gentoo, with 14 billion monthly pageviews with occasional influxes of DDOS saturating an entire OC192, on a super strict budget, then by god one can sustain this fucking site for less than 2BTC/mo.

It always surprises me to see what some people will masturbate to.


Anyway, lemme backtrack to your idiotic statement. Full time IT guy to manage things? sure, if he's a retard. the guys that do the real, serious work are the core linux kernel developers, and those are extreme geeks. the kind you can respect. too bad there aren't enough of them.

Ok, let me get something straight here, the words I say mean something, probably not what you think though. When I say "software project" I don't mean "things", I mean "software project" which has much more to it than "fine tuning nginx", throw 600k, some developers and half a ton of cheesy poofs into a room, what usually comes out isn't a working product someone cares about. It's usually more around the lines of a couple homemade frameworks, and fattened developers.


@OP passwords are usually md5/sha1 encrypted with these forum scripts,

Things have a proper name, the proper name for md5 and sha1 is "a hash function", repeat after me: "a hash function". And I may even precise it further "a broken hash function". It is used mostly by confused PHPtards who have no idea about what they are doing. So if someone asks your opinion next time, point them at bcrypt, no fucking exceptions.


put faith and trust in your intuition.

That seems to be the reason of your confusion, the correct way to make decision is by "thinking", thinking may or may not take your original gut feeling into account.


and use pgp when sending PMs discussing sketchy shit. the fbi could be lurking inside. the integrity of things is always questionable.

See, we have one fine example of mental confusion here, using PGP when sending PMs about sketchy shit won't protect you from getting entrapped by the FBI if they are, as you say, lurking inside.
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 12, 2013, 01:51:42 AM
#27
OP yes Theymos has been doxed but that info is not public for obvious reasons. However there is a fair amount on the Intternet if you know where to look.

Also ignore these trolls(staff). Your question was a valid one.

Hey Goat! What's today's reason for being butthurt?

Nobody said OP's question was invalid, he's just looking for answers in the wrong places, namely this forum.
My suggestion would be to skip the forum's trust system altogether and use bitcoin-otc.com which is much simpler and straightforward and doesn't have the bizarre concept of "default trust".
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 162
November 12, 2013, 12:37:20 AM
#26
I've been a professional software developer for almost 10 years, I have a pretty decent idea of what it takes to run a site using someone else's forum software.

No offense, but your statements say otherwise. Hint:

Quote from: go1111111
-Bitcointalk uses Javascript. It is well known that a lot of members here will be on bitcointalk and on their favorite web wallet site at the same time. There may be some XSS opportunity here, though as I said I'm not an expert.

And so 90% of the internet, also you have no understanding of XSS. Can you please stop posting your "expert" opinions please? Because that's simply dumb.

I think some of you are misinterpreting my statement, which is understandable because it wasn't too clear. By "I have a pretty decent idea of what it takes to run a site using someone else's forum software" I meant that I had a sense of the resources it takes to do so, not that I'm familiar with the day to day technical process. I know people who run forums, I know roughly how much they spend on them, and I know how good their forums are. I know that bitcointalk doesn't look like a forum with 600k in funding.

You have correctly identified that I know almost nothing about XSS. I wasn't relying on my technical experience to give credibility to my XSS concerns. I pointed out my background to call bullshit on the idea that someone was spending $600k on this forum. Theymos basically confirmed that by saying that the 600k hasn't been spent.




legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1000
November 12, 2013, 12:00:44 AM
#26
Your misunderstanding of how the trust system works is one reason why you are not in DefaultTrust.

No you misunderstand the trust system, yeah we get it, we don't have to trust anyone or use any list, but the fact is at some point you have to use the list that the majority of the group uses. So you have these default list, which the majority of the new users use, while old users are not forced to use, now have too. I used satoshi as a my default for a while then people were leaving me bad feedback and FALSE feedback and I had then switch to monitor that. Which is still something not fixed.
administrator
Activity: 5222
Merit: 13032
November 11, 2013, 11:51:37 PM
#25
"Actual trustworthiness is important"  But you say you did not trust him?

I trusted him not to abuse his power. Mostly because he had much to lose and almost nothing to gain by doing so, not because I thought that he was particularly ethical. And I was right: he didn't abuse his power in any noticeable way.
administrator
Activity: 5222
Merit: 13032
November 11, 2013, 11:44:07 PM
#24
Well, you said you trusted the guy. You vouched for him.

No. That's not how the Trust system works. There's a reason why trust lists and trust ratings are separate. You can trust that someone is not a scammer but not trust them to have a good trust list, and vice-versa. Listing someone in your trust list indicates only that you like their ratings and/or trust list in some way (defined by you). With the default trust system, my goal is to maximize the number of default-trusted ratings while minimizing the number of incorrect ratings (especially negative ones). There haven't been any major failures in this area.

There actually isn't a way to vouch for someone in the trust system if you use it properly. There are only trust events which are interpreted by users, and trust list relationships which are mostly unrelated to real trust. This is why I kept my positive trust rating of TF even though my overall trust in him has diminished. My personal history with TF has not changed. My trust in him has diminished, but only because of how I am interpreting other trust events. My own history/rating is still relevant to the full picture of TF's trustworthiness in my mind, and it may still be relevant to others.

Your misunderstanding of how the trust system works is one reason why you are not in DefaultTrust.
administrator
Activity: 5222
Merit: 13032
November 11, 2013, 11:20:58 PM
#23
yeah, Theymos, would you mind telling us the reason Tradefortress was on the default trust list? My speculation was that he had "disclosed security flaws in a responsible manner" as your feedback for him said, but was that the reason or was there another reason?

No. The damage someone in DefaultTrust can do is very limited, so a lot of trust isn't required. I've actually long been suspicious of TradeFortress because he was holding too much BTC, CoinLenders looked like a HYIP, and I've heard some suspicious rumors about him. But I thought that he was very unlikely to go totally crazy with trust. (And he didn't.)

He was on DefaultTrust because his trust list was good. There were only a few problems that ever resulted from his list, but he brought many good people into the trust network. He also seemed to understand the trust system more than anyone else, and he paid the most attention to trust activity across the trust system.

Someone in DefaultTrust is like a moderator responsible for cultivating a good trust network. They need to make sure that anyone trusting them sees many accurate ratings and no inaccurate ratings. Actual trustworthiness is important, but I can quickly respond to any abuses, so it isn't the most important factor in my decision to add someone to DefaultTrust.

The default trust network needs to work in this (somewhat counter-intuitive) centralized way, but you don't need to use the trust system in this way. You can use it more like a web of trust, adding only people who you trust to your trust list.
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 2156
Welcome to the SaltySpitoon, how Tough are ya?
November 11, 2013, 11:02:30 PM
#22
Since you asked maybe cuz he was on the "default trust" list?

yeah, Theymos, would you mind telling us the reason Tradefortress was on the default trust list? My speculation was that he had "disclosed security flaws in a responsible manner" as your feedback for him said, but was that the reason or was there another reason?
administrator
Activity: 5222
Merit: 13032
November 11, 2013, 11:01:18 PM
#21
Since you asked maybe cuz he was on the "default trust" list?

Ask anyone on the default trust list (or any of the moderators) how well they know me... I don't need to be friends with people to identify them as good moderators or trust-list-builders.
administrator
Activity: 5222
Merit: 13032
November 11, 2013, 10:39:40 PM
#20
-Theymos seems to have been a defender/supporter of TradeFortress. 

Where'd you get that impression? I defended his Ripple-related actions once, and my opinion of that case hasn't changed. But I barely know him.

I'm not a sociable guy. There are few people in the Bitcoin community who I have any sort of casual relationship with. AFAIK, I've met a grand total of two forum users AFK.

-The fact that Theymos allegedly raised like $600k for this forum, yet the forum is not that good technically, is sort of weird and makes me wonder how much of that was actually spent on the forum. 

It's provable via the block chain that that money hasn't been spent, and I don't even hold a lot of that money.
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 11, 2013, 08:53:11 PM
#19
It's not an either/or. Would you not care if theymos was using people's bctalk passwords to try to crack the web wallet passwords of newbs, as long as it didn't affect you?

Your question seems to imply that I'd have some way of knowing. I don't. I do know that money does strange things to people, so the correct course of action is to avoid the problem altogether by ensuring your very own safety.

You'd want the benefits of being your own bank without having your own bank to protect?
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 162
November 11, 2013, 08:34:14 PM
#18

Everyone is responsible for their own safety, knowing that nobody will ever bail you out, or protect you is a much saner mindset than the "let's protect dumb people from their own stupidity and incompetence" fantasy.

It's not an either/or. Would you not care if theymos was using people's bctalk passwords to try to crack the web wallet passwords of newbs, as long as it didn't affect you?
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 11, 2013, 08:13:58 PM
#17
Being indirectly raped by theymos still sounds suboptimal.

Sale/purchase of forum accounts is openly permitted, hence the indirect rape.
Just don't trust the forum.


I've been a professional software developer for almost 10 years, I have a pretty decent idea of what it takes to run a site using someone else's forum software.

Stick to development, you're not ready for management.
If there was a magical open source silver bullet it'd be used already. Otherwise it has to be tailor-made, see previous post.


I'm not asking about my own security. You guys are acting like it's not legitimate to care whether owners of this forum are contributing to newbs and dumb people being stolen from.

Everyone is responsible for their own safety, knowing that nobody will ever bail you out, or protect you is a much saner mindset than the "let's protect dumb people from their own stupidity and incompetence" fantasy.


Anyways, theymos is asking SMF for an exception so the forum's modifications can be audited. so you can audit with to your heart's content.

What?
legendary
Activity: 2058
Merit: 1462
November 11, 2013, 08:03:33 PM
#16
You seem to assume that transforming money into working software is easy and frictionless. It just isn't, managing an IT project is a full-time job.

I've been a professional software developer for almost 10 years, I have a pretty decent idea of what it takes to run a site using someone else's forum software.
...right.

Anyways, theymos is asking SMF for an exception so the forum's modifications can be audited. so you can audit with to your heart's content.
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 162
November 11, 2013, 07:54:01 PM
#15
That is true, dumb people will get raped, probably not by theymos though. Or at least not directly.

Being indirectly raped by theymos still sounds suboptimal.

You seem to assume that transforming money into working software is easy and frictionless. It just isn't, managing an IT project is a full-time job.

I've been a professional software developer for almost 10 years, I have a pretty decent idea of what it takes to run a site using someone else's forum software.


You shouldn't need to trust him if you use a different password for all sites you care about and if you assume no PM privacy.
Bottom line, if your security depends on trusting theymos I suggest you review your security instead of looking for reasons to trust him.

I'm not asking about my own security. You guys are acting like it's not legitimate to care whether owners of this forum are contributing to newbs and dumb people being stolen from.
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
November 11, 2013, 07:45:26 PM
#14
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoSWnxieScw heres a interview he did seems pretty transparent to me

Excellent fine, bud. I just found one of Gavin Andresen: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vtkflEaeGjo
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 11, 2013, 07:44:25 PM
#13
I'm not an expert.

Obviously not, but at least you have a realistic assessment here. It's just that XSS doesn't work that way.


-There are some small % of newb/dumb bitcointalk forum members who probably use a similar password on bitcointalk and on their favorite web wallet. It seems possible that Theymos could somehow get access to people's bitcointalk passwords if he wanted, giving him or his friends a huge password cracking advantage over a random person.

That is true, dumb people will get raped, probably not by theymos though. Or at least not directly.


-Theymos seems to have been a defender/supporter of TradeFortress. It's possible that they are friends, but I'm not sure. The circumstances around 1 million dollars disappearing from TradeFortress's inputs.io business suggest that TradeFortress may be very shady.

TF looks like he's been sloppy, probably not malicious though. But that's just my opinion.


-There are a lot of people on reddit who pop up with stories about how funds were stolen from their hot wallets because they didn't have 2-factor authentication, and they describe having pretty complex passwords. It's somewhat of a mystery how their passwords are being cracked.

I think there are far more plausible explanations the one you're suggesting.


-The fact that Theymos allegedly raised like $600k for this forum, yet the forum is not that good technically, is sort of weird and makes me wonder how much of that was actually spent on the forum.

You seem to assume that transforming money into working software is easy and frictionless. It just isn't, managing an IT project is a full-time job.


I'm not saying we should suspect Theymos of any nefarious activities, but the above is just why I care more about Theymos's trust level than I care about a random user's.

You shouldn't need to trust him if you use a different password for all sites you care about and if you assume no PM privacy.
Bottom line, if your security depends on trusting theymos I suggest you review your security instead of looking for reasons to trust him.
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 162
November 11, 2013, 07:43:46 PM
#12
So, you want to trust theymos to protect people from their own stupidity? Did I got that right?

Not quite. I'm just wondering how sure we are that Theymos is not the kind of person to try to actively take advantage of the stupidity of people who use his forum.
legendary
Activity: 1386
Merit: 1002
November 11, 2013, 07:36:45 PM
#11
So, you want to trust theymos to protect people from their own stupidity? Did I got that right?
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 162
November 11, 2013, 07:30:28 PM
#10

I'm not a security expert, but if Theymos did want to be untrustworthy, it seems like he's in a better position to do harm than a lot of people:

-Bitcointalk uses Javascript. It is well known that a lot of members here will be on bitcointalk and on their favorite web wallet site at the same time. There may be some XSS opportunity here, though as I said I'm not an expert.

-There are some small % of newb/dumb bitcointalk forum members who probably use a similar password on bitcointalk and on their favorite web wallet. It seems possible that Theymos could somehow get access to people's bitcointalk passwords if he wanted, giving him or his friends a huge password cracking advantage over a random person.

A few small bits of info that I found mildly concerning, and caused me to be curious about Theymos:

-Theymos seems to have been a defender/supporter of TradeFortress. It's possible that they are friends, but I'm not sure. The circumstances around 1 million dollars disappearing from TradeFortress's inputs.io business suggest that TradeFortress may be very shady.

-There are a lot of people on reddit who pop up with stories about how funds were stolen from their hot wallets because they didn't have 2-factor authentication, and they describe having pretty complex passwords. It's somewhat of a mystery how their passwords are being cracked.

-The fact that Theymos allegedly raised like $600k for this forum, yet the forum is not that good technically, is sort of weird and makes me wonder how much of that was actually spent on the forum.

I'm not saying we should suspect Theymos of any nefarious activities, but the above is just why I care more about Theymos's trust level than I care about a random user's.

 
legendary
Activity: 1386
Merit: 1002
November 11, 2013, 07:15:24 PM
#9
There's not that much info about him on the Internet, at least not much visible from some cursory searching.

Bad job sherlock.

What info are you finding? Sure, he appears to have a website which lists some personal preferences, an inactive twitter account, a Wikipedia user page which lists more personal preferences, and some references to his email/AIM/ICQ accounts. That's not very useful information for establishing trust.

And why do you need to trust him that much, may I ask?
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 11, 2013, 07:15:03 PM
#8
That's not very useful information for establishing trust.

That's probably because you are trying to build trust the incorrect way.
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 162
November 11, 2013, 07:13:04 PM
#7
There's not that much info about him on the Internet, at least not much visible from some cursory searching.

Bad job sherlock.

What info are you finding? Sure, he appears to have a website which lists some personal preferences, an inactive twitter account, a Wikipedia user page which lists more personal preferences, and some references to his email/AIM/ICQ accounts. That's not very useful information for establishing trust.



legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 11, 2013, 07:03:13 PM
#6
It looks like his name is Michael Marquardt.

Good job sherlock.


There's not that much info about him on the Internet, at least not much visible from some cursory searching.

Bad job sherlock.
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 162
November 11, 2013, 06:58:05 PM
#5
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoSWnxieScw heres a interview he did seems pretty transparent to me

Are you claiming that Theymos is actually Gavin Andresen? That doesn't seem likely.

It looks like his name is Michael Marquardt. There's not that much info about him on the Internet, at least not much visible from some cursory searching.
hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
November 11, 2013, 06:46:20 PM
#4

Has Theymos (the person who runs this forum) ever revealed any personal info about himself? Do we know his name, where he lives, etc? Is the real person behind the Theymos handle an active member of the community apart from on this forum and on reddit?





Everything you wanted to know.
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 1008
1davout
November 11, 2013, 06:44:13 PM
#3
Has Theymos (the person who runs this forum) ever revealed any personal info about himself?

Yes

Do we know his name, where he lives, etc?

Yes
legendary
Activity: 1904
Merit: 1058
Vave.com - Crypto Casino
November 11, 2013, 06:41:20 PM
#2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoSWnxieScw heres a interview he did seems pretty transparent to me
full member
Activity: 187
Merit: 162
November 11, 2013, 06:38:01 PM
#1

Has Theymos (the person who runs this forum) ever revealed any personal info about himself? Do we know his name, where he lives, etc? Is the real person behind the Theymos handle an active member of the community apart from on this forum and on reddit?



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