Pages:
Author

Topic: New 400 BTC Bounty Pales Roger Ver's 37.6 BTC Bounty for Return of Stolen BTC - page 7. (Read 18345 times)

legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
Could you provide people with all public information you can about where the bitcoins you put into Instawallet came from (another online wallet ? only a single transfer or multiple transfers over time ?)

I think that'd be more productive that trying to find some sense in PR strategies or press quotes  Grin


They were purchased anonymously at a restaurant halfway between Sandwich, IL, and Chicago, in Naperville, IL, about the second week of December, 2012. Taxing my memory, the total was 1,132 + x(single digit).xxx... and immediately put in a freshly created InstaWallet bitcoin wallet. A couple/three days later I split the three accounts up into 1,000, 132, and x.xxx... wallets, always using InstaWallet while in my possession. Hope that helps with your plans.


thanks, do you remember how the first transaction in that restaurant was performed ? using which client ? on a smartphone (maybe unlikely in 2012) ? anything else ?


I had a laptop and he had a smartphone (don't believe it was one of those tablet thingies). What do you mean by client?
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
Phinnaeus, take no offense, but your technical knowledge make me think it's possible you where using a link forged to display your wallet, but in fact was pointing to the wallet of one of your "friend"

Or your local computer was corrupted by someone you know and was pointing to another wallet

Have you seriously considered this option?

EDIT : Do you still have the hardrive of your laptop ; have you always used the same laptop ?

I've stated before that I burned the old laptop oppose to putting it to the curb, so no worries there.

I did have control of the bitcoins, albeit via InstaWallet, but you know what I mean. When I first learnt that InstaWallet operated like a fractional reserve, i.e. pooling all the coins, I no longer felt the need to move them to any new wallet. Hell, all the times I visit blockchain.info to view my bitcoins, it always shown a zero balance, with half the time I viewed the same on InstaWallet URL-provided site, I was greeted with the same, but rested assure by davout that all is well and that it was normal. Even psy concurred at the time. It was at that time that davout would have been aware as to which addresses I possessed via the IP of the address I gave him as an example of what I was trying to relay at the time. Then he announced that he was going be outta pocket to after the first of April, of which he didn't return til the 18th of April, 2013, with Boussac not addressing the myriad of concerns as to where the hell was davout.

Perhaps, I may lose my sanity after all.  Roll Eyes

~Bruno Kucinskas
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
But, you have to enter the public address somewhere to fund it, no ?
Gave it to a friend to receive bitcoins?


Once, for the 1,132 + x.xxx... BTC after I created the initial InstaWallet URL. Once the bitcoins were transferred, I handed over the money, not even waiting for any confirmations because I had faith in the system. Besides, he was in hurry and so was I, for I had a load of barn wood to pick up north of Chicago that day and I was running late, and still had traffic to contend with.

~Bruno Kucinskas
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
I tried the honey approach twice, now I love the taste of vinegar and salt.

easier said than done I guess, but you should try your best to calm down, forget about davout (he might not be providing the most conventional customer support for you Grin) and provide everybody with as much information as possible regarding where the coins you put into Instawallet came from - every little piece of information is welcome, and there are concerned french people really trying to help here.


The little, tiny, itsy-bitsy information I desired is one they're unwilling to cough up, and that is the name, just the motherfuckin' name, of the independent auditor that conducted the investigation April of last year, not some new kid on the block's name, for at some point in time they WILL be under oath, and Paymium's books will be opened for the whole world to see what they are hiding.

Damn, I feel so much better after penning and getting ready to hit the post button.

BTW, where the fuck is the end of this thread?

~Bruno Kucinskas
hero member
Activity: 623
Merit: 500
CTO, Ledger
Anyway, if I can run a block scan for particular transaction information (id, timestamp, amount of btc, whatever) I can do it, so if you know more let me know.

an output above 1100 going into an input of a transaction going into 1FrtkNXastDoMAaorowys27AKQERxgmZjY in December 2012 / January 2013 looks like a good starting point.

legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
All I have is what InstaWallet gave back to me once it came back online. That is all.

OK so you basically have nothing at all. It is strictly your word against his. And there is no serious reason to believe you more than him.
The rational decision for you now should be to move along. I know it is difficult but the sooner you will acknowledge your loss the sooner you will feel whole again.

I say this because it happened to me also (not about Bitcoin). I lost 100k€ and I almost lost my sanity. Sometimes the world is not fair. That's too bad but that's a fact.

I am sorry for your loss.

Good luck.

Thanks, bud. My sanity will remain intact while I drag these son a bitches by their fuckin' French pig ears through the mud until they give me reason to stop. Enough people played their game, now it's time for them to get a taste of their own medicine. Besides, I have fellow bitcoiners cheering me on, with very few cheering for Team Paymium who, BTW, is on the defense, and I have the ball.

~Bruno Kucinskas
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
Nice bounty....I'm fairly new to this forum but read quite a bit about your quest to get your BTC back. Hopefully this will help.

I hope that you get your coins back, but I believe that it is a long shot that your bounty will help.

The reason for this is that you are asking for the wrong outcome. By offering 400 BTC to get your ~1.1k BTC back you are essentially saying that you will give someone money if they give (get) you more money. Due to the fact that whoever holds the keys to the address that contains the unspent outputs of BTC owns the coins there would be little incentive for someone who was able to somehow get your coins in their possession to return them to you.

A "better" bounty would be one that offers 400 (or other amount) BTC for the arrest (or indictment, or conviction - it is up to you) of the person/persons that stole the BTC. This would give people an incentive to spend time and resources investigating who stole the coins and would also give an incentive to return all/some of the stolen coins.

The initial goal was to offer a bounty for somebody to act a liaison to pressure Paymium to refund what's due mine, with them getting a third for their efforts. I apologize for not offering a bounty to have them arrested, paying such outta my own pocket, when I can sit here for as long as it takes to pressure the fuck outta them till they surrender.

Remember, there's still another ~20K non-customers that have yet received their bitcoins besides just me.

~Bruno Kucinskas
hero member
Activity: 623
Merit: 500
CTO, Ledger
Could you provide people with all public information you can about where the bitcoins you put into Instawallet came from (another online wallet ? only a single transfer or multiple transfers over time ?)

I think that'd be more productive that trying to find some sense in PR strategies or press quotes  Grin


They were purchased anonymously at a restaurant halfway between Sandwich, IL, and Chicago, in Naperville, IL, about the second week of December, 2012. Taxing my memory, the total was 1,132 + x(single digit).xxx... and immediately put in a freshly created InstaWallet bitcoin wallet. A couple/three days later I split the three accounts up into 1,000, 132, and x.xxx... wallets, always using InstaWallet while in my possession. Hope that helps with your plans.

thanks, do you remember how the first transaction in that restaurant was performed ? using which client ? on a smartphone (maybe unlikely in 2012) ? anything else ?
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
Could you provide people with all public information you can about where the bitcoins you put into Instawallet came from (another online wallet ? only a single transfer or multiple transfers over time ?)

I think that'd be more productive that trying to find some sense in PR strategies or press quotes  Grin


They were purchased anonymously at a restaurant halfway between Sandwich, IL, and Chicago, in Naperville, IL, about the second week of December, 2012. Taxing my memory, the total was 1,132 + x(single digit).xxx... and immediately put in a freshly created InstaWallet bitcoin wallet. A couple/three days later I split the three accounts up into 1,000, 132, and x.xxx... wallets, always using InstaWallet while in my possession. Hope that helps with your plans.

At one time on my old laptop that I no longer have due to going dead, I took a couple screenshots of URL pages and had the old URLs bookmarked. One of the last things I was able to do was recover the URLs via a thumbdrive. The old laptop was still functional when I made the initial claims, but no longer when I resubmitted all three claims in Oct., Nov., and Dec. of last year. Claims that davout claims he now can't find.

~Bruno Kucinskas
hero member
Activity: 714
Merit: 661
But, you have to enter the public address somewhere to fund it, no ?
Gave it to a friend to receive bitcoins?


Except if it were running on a sort of fractional reserve different than 100%, in which case, one part of it was just debt, off blockchain, without any proof, and bruno bought that. (nothing wrong doing it, that's how our banking system works)

Quote
I say I got these Frenchies by their tiny balls.
Well I guess, as long as they have your money, they are the one that get you by the balls. Shocked

Anyway, if I can run a block scan for particular transaction information (id, timestamp, amount of btc, whatever) I can do it, so if you know more let me know.
hero member
Activity: 623
Merit: 500
CTO, Ledger
I tried the honey approach twice, now I love the taste of vinegar and salt.

easier said than done I guess, but you should try your best to calm down, forget about davout (he might not be providing the most conventional customer support for you Grin) and provide everybody with as much information as possible regarding where the coins you put into Instawallet came from - every little piece of information is welcome, and there are concerned french people really trying to help here.
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
I can't understand how it is possible that Phinnaeus (sorry, I just see that it's the first time I write your pseudo correctly) dont even have a single tx ID of a transaction going to this wallet.

You have never send funds on it via bitcoin-QT ?

This is going to come as a shocker to you, but I seriously don't know what a bitcoin-QT is unless I Google it first. InstaWallet was the only wallet I ever used due to its simplicity and, moreover, the people operating it were held to high esteem, myself even elevating them higher. Sick, ain't it? Motherfuckin' sick!

~Bruno Kucinskas
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
It's Money 2.0| It’s gold for nerds | It's Bitcoin
Nice bounty....I'm fairly new to this forum but read quite a bit about your quest to get your BTC back. Hopefully this will help.

I hope that you get your coins back, but I believe that it is a long shot that your bounty will help.

The reason for this is that you are asking for the wrong outcome. By offering 400 BTC to get your ~1.1k BTC back you are essentially saying that you will give someone money if they give (get) you more money. Due to the fact that whoever holds the keys to the address that contains the unspent outputs of BTC owns the coins there would be little incentive for someone who was able to somehow get your coins in their possession to return them to you.

A "better" bounty would be one that offers 400 (or other amount) BTC for the arrest (or indictment, or conviction - it is up to you) of the person/persons that stole the BTC. This would give people an incentive to spend time and resources investigating who stole the coins and would also give an incentive to return all/some of the stolen coins.
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
Do not settle for anything less than owed! Renege publicly right now and use the scenario above. All BTC not a single fucking satoshshi less. They are enjoying the value of your BTC. Personally, I would not wait. I would sue the them and go for max value in US dollars because you would have sold them at their peak, being the savvy investor that you are (hint hint). Use a US Court because they are notorious for awarding high damages. Your pain and suffering is worth BTC.

Unfortunately Paymium being a french company he can only sue them here in France, and has only two possibilities :
- a civil case, in which he has to prove everything himself,
- a criminal case, where he may get a bit of help from the police.

Given what I have read so far, he is unable to provide the slightest track of the incoming bitcoins, which would be the absolute minimum to prove that (a) he had the money in the first place and (b) he sent it to Paymium.

Without these the civil case is not even an option, and the criminal way could be very difficult too.


Great! Now, I can continue to drag their good name through the mud till them bastards give, seeing that I probably won't be suing them, with holding out hope that they sue me. Either way, somebody, somewhere, somehow is going to be opening up Paymium's books, books I know as a fact they rather not have open, for their concern and, moreover, other Bitcoin entity's concerns. Know what I mean, JellyBean?

I say I got these Frenchies by their tiny balls.

~Bruno Kucinskas
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
Well if I was davout, I'd have a "buddy" negotiate this settlement pronto - settle for $50k, take the 400BTC reward.  Easy money! Grin

SOB! I didn't think of that, that he may use this thread now to his advantage, and still come out like a motherfuckin' bandit. Fuck me royal! The only thing I can say about this revelation is that he best have an anonymous pseudo-liaison (or is it pseudo-anonymous liaison?) person in place, otherwise I will get really pissed.

Do not settle for anything less than owed! Renege publicly right now and use the scenario above. All BTC not a single fucking satoshshi less. They are enjoying the value of your BTC. Personally, I would not wait. I would sue the them and go for max value in US dollars because you would have sold them at their peak, being the savvy investor that you are (hint hint). Use a US Court because they are notorious for awarding high damages. Your pain and suffering is worth BTC.

I'm trying to be fair, albeit going from a $50K settlement to now a minimum of $150K USD, and possibly climbing all the way back up to the full 1,132 BTC the more I dig. Holy fuck! I just realized that I'm now a miner. It's a fuckin' shame that it's my coins I'm mining, but a miner I now is nonetheless. It feels good to be  miner.  Cry Okay, maybe not that good.

~Bruno Kucinskas
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
I was well-aware of that fact, of which always begged the question why the switch...

Only speculating here : one plausible explanation is that Aqoba/Crédit Mutuel has been scared to death after the hack that :
- it was somehow easy to steal a substantial amount of bitcoin,
- there was nothing that could be done to recover them.

Scared. To. Death.

Only possible issue was to fully stop the partnership, which has be done very professionally in my opinion (I was a Bitcoin-Central customer and I fully recovered everything).

Then they had to start a new partnership, with a smaller/less fearful company (not really a bank, only a "payment service provider"). And completely redesign the exchange by removing even the presence of a "hot wallet".

+ a lot, thanks for putting some sanity into that thread  Smiley

we're currently looking at :

* an online wallet that used URLs to identify accounts
* said URLs listed by a search engine at some point (due to the hack or for some another reason, who knows)
* potentially the full URL database compromised due to the hack
* said database seized during the police investigation (as davout said in the logs above)

Basically an epic mess, which would likely have a better chance to get settled properly without threats and name calling IMHO.


Early on during the InstaWallet claim thread posting, I resorted to vitriol attacks, but put a cease to end when a kind fellow Bitcoiner echoed your same sentiment. But, once that effort went nowhere, I restarted the practice, but chill when davout and I started a dialog via email the later part of last year.

Since Februaryish, I have once again restarted the practice with no intent this time of ending, hence being on full-tilt with this motherfuckin' fiasco. I tried the honey approach twice, now I love the taste of vinegar and salt.

~Bruno Kucinskas
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
Phinnaeus Gage, why don't you have any Tx Id that served to make the transfer to Paymium ?
Even partial information would help to find it in the blockchain, I can run a block scan for that if it can help.
If it is just that an privacy problem, pm me.

All I have is what InstaWallet gave back to me once it came back online. That is all. The same was true of the third 0.835 BTC wallet, but a bitcoin address finally did appear just prior to me being able to submit the three claims the very first time.

https://www.instawallet.org/w/rL2DhMWW9tDvs24oFwtiq99zhh7A3ii6bg
https://www.instawallet.org/w/gZh1afVVl5aAtjNwXo0BiYChTxjwln33ab

I guess the following is the reason InstaWallet is offline:

Quote
Domain Name:INSTAWALLET.ORG
Domain ID: D162075183-LROR
Creation Date: 2011-04-19T21:14:25Z
Updated Date: 2014-04-18T09:57:07Z
Registry Expiry Date: 2015-04-19T21:14:25Z
Sponsoring Registrar:OVH (R135-LROR)
Sponsoring Registrar IANA ID: 433
WHOIS Server:
Referral URL:
Domain Status: clientDeleteProhibited
Domain Status: clientTransferProhibited
Registrant ID:ovh5350f6f2o5k4
Registrant Name:GONZAGUE GRANDVAL
Registrant Organization:PAYMIUM SAS
Registrant Street: 73, RUE DU CHATEAU
Registrant City:BOULOGNE-BILLANCOURT
Registrant State/Province:
Registrant Postal Code:92100
Registrant Country:FR
Registrant Phone:+33.100000000
Registrant Phone Ext:
Registrant Fax:
Registrant Fax Ext:
Registrant Email:[email protected]
Admin ID:ovh5350f6f2k5lq
Admin Name:Gonzague GRANDVAL
Admin Organization:PAYMIUM
Admin Street: 73 rue du chateau
Admin City:Boulogne-Billancourt
Admin State/Province:
Admin Postal Code:92100
Admin Country:FR
Admin Phone:+33.786541133
Admin Phone Ext:
Admin Fax:
Admin Fax Ext:
Admin Email:[email protected]
Tech ID:ovh5350f6f2k5lq
Tech Name:Gonzague GRANDVAL
Tech Organization:PAYMIUM
Tech Street: 73 rue du chateau
Tech City:Boulogne-Billancourt
Tech State/Province:
Tech Postal Code:92100
Tech Country:FR
Tech Phone:+33.786541133
Tech Phone Ext:
Tech Fax:
Tech Fax Ext:
Tech Email:[email protected]
Name Server:DNS101.OVH.NET
Name Server:NS101.OVH.NET
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
DNSSEC:Unsigned
hero member
Activity: 908
Merit: 657
It's been a long time i haven't seen a thread with so much action



Must have missed the goat thread.
hero member
Activity: 623
Merit: 500
CTO, Ledger
Could you provide people with all public information you can about where the bitcoins you put into Instawallet came from (another online wallet ? only a single transfer or multiple transfers over time ?)

I think that'd be more productive that trying to find some sense in PR strategies or press quotes  Grin
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
It's now $100K USD due to Lemon Way deleting a mundane tweet asking where they could obtain bitcoins, when the answer was walking distance to Paymium's back door, a back door, I may add, that used to launder bitcoins.

Seriously you should read your own thread :
That deal is now off the table due to Lemon Way deleting their tweet(s) expressing interest in obtaining bitcoins three days prior to the InstaWallet "hack" because I now honestly believe they, too, are hiding shit.

You should know that at the time of the hack, the banking partner of Paymium was Aqoba, a subsidiary of "Crédit Mutuel", one the big french banks.  It is well documented everywhere.

Lemon Way came later, when they relaunched Bitcoin-Central (around Q4 of 2013)

I have no idea when exactly Lemon Way started talking with Paymium, but the tweet they deleted only shows they were noobs by the time. Nothing more.



The least I will now accept is $150K USD via BTC. (not meant as a diss toward you, ghdp, kind sir) Now, I look even less retarded, eh?

On March 27, 2013, Sébastien Burlet asked via his Twitter account https://twitter.com/lemonway how to obtain bitcoins as shown below.



Yet, just 24 hours earlier guess who he is setting next to. I bet you'll never guess in a million years. Hint: GG.

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:m5byqzAYb7AJ:www.payforum.fr/files/PROGRAMME_PayFORUM_vf.pdf+&cd=18&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us

Quote
Of the 3/26/2014 9:00 to 10:45

Themes: Virtual Currency Virtual currency:

Issues & Prospects At the time of dematerialisation, the advent of virtual currency like the AmazonCoins and bitcoins raises regulatory and safety questions. Thus, whileas this type of currency circulating on the web and seems to attract some consumersinclined to the use of alternatives, still unknown on the controlthis type of currency. The conference will be addressed by these new players who are trying toa place in this emerging market and the regulator.

Speakers:

Conference Chair: Cédric Peltier, Manager, Kurt SalmonCathie-Rosalie Joly, Partner, Office Ulys - Gonzaga Grandval, CEO, Paymium -Sébastien Burlet, President, Lemon Way - Geoffroy Goffinet, Banque de France

I have to admit, that's some n00b!

"Damn, I was sitting right next to that Bitcoin dude, and never took the time ask him how I can get me own hands on some precious. What to do? What to do? AHHHhhhh! Me thinkith I use my Twitter account and ask me keen followers if they know, for they're the bestest. Later, when I'm well-versed and somehow weasel my way into that very lucrative Bitcoin space, I'll simply delete the tweet, and nobody will be the wiser, eh, Kitty?"

"Meow!"

Here's another mundane tweet that Lemon Way opted to delete: https://twitter.com/lemonway/status/192001692177412096



Want more proof that we're not dealing with a n00b here? Okay, here it is:

http://www.lefigaro.fr/conso/2012/06/14/05007-20120614ARTFIG00693-le-smartphone-revolutionne-le-paiement-en-ligne.php

Sébastien Burlet is the only person that commented on the article linked above (I had to use Google Translator, for the page won't translate on its own like they normally do)

Quote
In the mobile payment, there are payment face to face with the merchant, which will replace a portion of the payment made by credit card now, and remote payment is made by bank transfer, check, or screws companies transfer Money well known diasporas from former French colonies, for example, or money for the unbanked.

The smartphone also enables sending money away easily between people. Thus it is possible to make a connection between his bank card and mobile number, much like iTunes makes a connection with the card and iTunes account; then send money to a mobile phone number. Without the need for bank details of the recipient. Mobile revolution that transforms eg Apple iPhone Genuine remote payment. This is the service launched by LemonWay since June 1 in France for example. Or Dwolla, Venmo USA. Or PingIt, mobile payment service in Barclays Bank in the United Kingdom. Chase QuickPay or the USA.

For sure, for sure, that Sébastien Burlet is one amazing n00b. What to know what's even more amazing? Thought so! Wait to read what the translated article he was commenting to. I took the liberty and bolded the important part. Fair warning! Don't dip into the popcorn just yet.

Quote
Digital portfolios will multiply in France in the coming months.

To pay online with a smartphone, the customer, his credit card in hand, still has laboriously enter the 16 digits on the small screen. But that will change. Soon, it will be enough to click on the website of e-shopping on a button V.me (Visa) or PayPass (MasterCard), for example, to set indicating only its identifier (name, e-mail ...) and a secret code. Bank details (account number or card) have been previously registered with MasterCard or Visa (usually via the bank) or other institutions who consider themselves legitimate to propose the solution of payment: PayPal, telephone operators mobile, etc..

In France, Buyster or Kwixo (Crédit Agricole) already offer this simplified method of payment. But only with certain partners e-merchants. Offers major operators, could provide a network of wider acceptance, are eagerly awaited. MasterCard has just announced the global launch of this formula with its digital portfolio, the PayPass Wallet. It should arrive in France in the first half of 2013.
In the fall for Visa

"His generalization depend on the speed with which banks, retailers, service providers will adapt to this new offering," says Jorn Lambert, at MasterCard. For its part, Visa announced its solution, called V.me in the fall. PayPal and intends to use the smartphone revolution to push his advantage, highlighting the PayPal account.

The stakes are high: to capture a large market of payment. Because consumers have already adopted the smartphone to do their shopping on the web. "More than 16% of traders who work with us in 2011 received a payment from a mobile," notes Gimena Diaz, commercial director of PayPal France. Especially, professionals predict that the smartphone could also be used to remotely adjust purchases in stores "hard". "We see every day that the boundary between traditional commerce and e-commerce is falling," says Marc Jaugey, at PayPal. Soon, the user can control the menu at fast food, pay on his smartphone before going to search around the corner. Or offer a new sportswear by comparing prices on the Internet by going to the store to select the model, and paying on his smartphone to save queuing at the checkout.
Internet can he have his money?

Facebook has created Facebook Credits, which can be bought on the website and become a virtual currency to pay safely games or applications, even from a mobile. In recent years, a "free" software (it does not belong to business) issues, he Bitcoins, which are traded on the sites (bitcoin-central.net, for example) to about $ 6 a. "Some 9 million bitcoins have already been created," notes Gonzaga Grandval, society Paymium. Few e-retailers accept this virtual currency, but users will sometimes use them to pay a restaurant, a taxi ... Since last April, the Yesibank, a French company, has created a new currency: the Yes.

Yes you earn by visiting certain sites, collecting friends on Facebook and used to go shopping with discounts at Virgin, Pixmania, Brandalley ... Example: 1000 yes + € 2 = 1 movie download is a 60% reduction

That's pretty fuckin' amazing to find an article where the sole commenter is commenting on an Bitcoin-based entity a year prior to them both sitting next to each other to give a talk on virtual currency and payment systems, yet said commenter had to ask his twerps where he could get his hands on some bitcoins. What are the odds?

The following image comes to mind, hopefully, you all, get its meaning.



To be clear, davout, the minimum settlement I would now consider is $150K USD via BTC, thanks to the above revelation.

I have done nothing today except work at this thread of which I've yet to reach its end, albeit I did take a quick breakfast break, but posted about David while taking a shit - literally!

~Bruno Kucinskas
Pages:
Jump to: