I am also still blamed for past mistakes.
I just hope that God will judge between you and me.
Looks like God judged indeed and it doesn't look too good for you. He downgraded your rank all the way back to Jr. Member after reviewing all of your fraudulent posts... Apparently, in this forum, the mods are the gods.
Since you do not like being blamed for past mistakes, I'm lending you a hand to avoid you from being blamed for future mistakes, too. You're welcome.
In this post, even the quotes from the interview were spinned. Simply google the original (correct) quote "I am no longer involved in that and I cannot discuss it" to find out. The correct original quote from the interview is:
"I am no longer involved in that and I cannot discuss it. It’s been turned over to other people. They are in charge of it now. I no longer have any connection."
After our friend's text-spinning make-over, it has become:
"I no longer participate in this work and I can not talk about it. This project has been entrusted to other people and they are now in charge of it. I have nothing to do with them anymore."Plagiarism, no source, text spinning. The fact that spinning was used, proves that this was not simply "forgetting to" or "not knowing that you should" add the source, but clearly trying to act as if the article was written by himself.
Here's our good friend's copy-pasted OP:
https://web.archive.org/web/20201010080501/https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5271927.0In 2014, Leah McGrath Goodman published a report in Newsweek claiming that Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto, a 64-year-old Japanese-American man from Southern California, was the creator of Bit[Suspicious link removed]dman claims that Doreen Nakamoto "implicitly" identified himself as Satoshi Nakamoto in an interview with Goodman; However, Doreen Nakamoto later vehemently denied any involvement in the creation of bitcoin.
McGrath Goodman is a distinguished reporter who has won awards in his career and has published articles in prestigious publications such as the Wall Street Journal, Fortune and the Guardian. In an interview with Anthony Pompliano, he explained that he now has new information about Nakamoto's identity and intends to write more about it. Goodman stated:
As my report was being published, the Department of Homeland Security launched an investigation.
I received many emails; But I received a special email from a group who wanted to divulge real information, and I hope to write more about it and provide more information about my initial report.
There are many more secrets, and they are not all just about Durin, and I think we all knew that.
Just focusing on Dorin was not very satisfying; There are definitely more tips and I really hope to be able to publish them as well.
Also, I want to respect the privacy and feelings of the people who spoke to me.
Goodman quoted Nakamoto as saying:
I no longer participate in this work and I can not talk about it.
This project has been entrusted to other people and they are now in charge of it. I have nothing to do with them anymore.
Police officers at the scene later confirmed that Goodman's quote from Nakamoto was correct.
In an interview with Pompliano, McGrath Goodman said that the issue of his relationship and interaction with Nakamoto before the face-to-face meeting was quite clear. He explained:
We've been exchanging emails for weeks. I even sent him an email with Bitcard given to me by Gavin Andresen. He also received all these emails before the interview, knowing that we were going to talk about bitcoin.
I was disappointed that he later claimed that he did not know what the subject of the conversation was. He certainly knew we wanted to talk about bitcoin. We've been talking about this for weeks on the Internet before I actually went to his house.
... And here's the original article:
https://dailyhodl.com/2020/08/26/journalist-behind-explosive-bitcoin-investigation-teases-new-info-on-satoshi-nakamoto/Leah McGrath Goodman published a report in 2014 suggesting Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto, a 64-year-old Japanese-American man and Southern California resident, was the creator of Bitcoin. Although she says Dorian Nakamoto appeared to “tacitly acknowledge” that identity in brief comments made to her, he later categorically denied any involvement in the creation of BTC.
McGrath Goodman, an award-winning reporter who’s published pieces in outlets like the Wall Street Journal, Fortune, and the Guardian, tells Anthony Pompliano that she now has new information on the story and is looking to write more.
“Homeland security opened an investigation as my story was coming out. I, of course, got lots of e-mails, but I got an e-mail from one group in particular that had real information to share, and I do hope to write a follow-up story that provides a lot more information surrounding what I reported initially. There is so much more and it isn’t specific to just Dorian, and I think we all knew that. It was not satisfying to just focus on Dorian – there is definitely more, and I hope very much to be able to share that. I also feel like I want to respect the privacy and feelings of some of the people who talked to me.”
McGrath Goodman first started looking into Bitcoin 2013.
Her investigation led her to Southern California, where Nakamoto had formally changed his name in 1973 from Satoshi Nakamoto to “Dorian Prentice Satoshi Nakamoto.” McGrath Goodman pointed to the fact that Nakamoto worked as a physicist and engineer, working for decades on classified projects for both the military and private sector companies.
She also interviewed family members who – while uncertain about Nakamoto’s identity as Bitcoin’s creator – indicated that he was a libertarian who distrusted the government and banks. Additionally, she pointed out similar quirks in Dorian Nakamoto and the Bitcoin creator’s writing styles.
When the reporter visited his home in Temple City, California, Nakamoto called the police. When the officers arrived, McGrath Goodman says Nakamoto remarked that he thought he was going to get in trouble if he talked to McGrath Goodman. The reporter then told the police she thought he was the creator of Bitcoin.
Says Nakamoto,
“I am no longer involved in that and I cannot discuss it. It’s been turned over to other people. They are in charge of it now. I no longer have any connection.”
The police present at the scene later confirmed Nakamoto had been quoted accurately.
In her interview with Pompliano, McGrath Goodman says the subject of her exchanges with Nakamoto before the in-person visit was crystal clear.
“There were weeks of us exchanging e-mails. I even sent him a letter with a Bitcard in it that Gavin [Andresen] had given me. And so when I did interview him, he had already received all this and knew that what we were talking about was Bitcoin, so I think one of the things that was most disappointing to me was in the aftermath him saying he didn’t know that that’s what we were talking about. He definitely knew that we were talking about it. We had been talking about it for weeks before I actually physically visited him.”
I'm quite sure many people have been banned for less, f.i. for actually sincerely not knowing you should add the source. This guy text-spinned the article, so he clearly knew about the plagiarism rules.
Anyway, whatever the judgment of the
gods mods may be, the whiner will be relieved to hear it's the last time I'm spending any time and energy on him.
I'm pretty confident he'll get himself into trouble again soon enough.