I guess what I'm trying to say is, I grew up in a world with a very clearly defined idea of morals and theft, and now I'm learning that by some standards everyone is a criminal.
That leads me to believe that maybe instead of individuals being wrong, the rules might be inappropriate and represent improper standards.
I think the biggest cause of this is that Bitcoin is something completely new and kind of goes beyond traditional trains of thought.
If nobody had gotten hurt by the scams (including peripheral effects to the entire Bitcoin economy and all that have vested interests in it), would you have gone to the lengths that you did, conducting your own personal investigation to try to get to the truth of the matter?
I think I react to the ones that I smell are preying on people and nothing more. I have invited known scammers to work with me to use their honest resources (although I keep them out of any position of power or responsibility) so I don't think it's the illegality that gets to me, it's the intentions of people. I honestly felt Bitscalper's intentions were honest in the beginning, and it progressed into a battle against common sense. CoinExchanger was a no-brainer common sensical scam waiting to happen, although he is hiding behind the argument of "anonymity doesn't mean scammer".
From an outside perspective, I think you did it because you don't want to see people get hurt. The question of whether or not allowing virutal-unknowns the potential to scam hundreds of people is worth the possibility that somehow, someday, our small little digital corner will evolve into some variation of the global, decentralized market that we all wish to see is a tough one. The probabilities of this happening are incalculable, but you knew you had an opportunity to directly help people right here, right now.
I admit I need work on my follow-through, but sometimes it seems like the world is standing still when they should be moving. In this thread, I'm just trying to see if I am right for moving or if everyone else is frozen because there is a veloceraptor right behind me.
I think your concern is noble, and the efforts you undertook are also noble. But, only you know what your intentions are. Sometimes, and quite often, doing the right thing can result in some pretty epic backlash. Keep your head on straight and don't be led astray by people who are likely more confused about their own values than you are.
Well as the other threads are starting to wreak of person vendettas on my part, I don't think I should waste any time defending my intentions-- instead I'd rather focus on the question-- is it alright for someone to operate a business anonymously? Should we be supporting someone who claims to have stolen coins and basically flips off the rest of the community who has a problem with it? Does it even matter what they do or how they do it so long as they didn't steal it themselves?
I feel like this is a libertarian argument and maybe I've been reading too much about Ron Paul lately.