Since it is the start of a new year, I thought it would be a good time to remember some exemplary behaviour by members of the Bitcointalk community throughout the years. The below examples show how some of our members acted when they received money that didn't belong to them. It shows how they performed in situations where they could have taken advantage of someone else's mistakes.
The list is not based on my personal ranking of best to worse, I just posted the examples as I came across them.
1.In April 2014, the user
johoe discovered a bug that allowed to expose private keys for specific addresses. He informed the community and blockchain.info about his findings and saved many users from losing money
You can get more info on this particular case here:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/reused-r-values-again-581411He made a list of addresses
here and
here that got exposed and asked the members who owned the coins on those addresses to prove their ownership so he could send them back.
The money has been returned to blockchain.info. Please write to blockchain support to claim refund.
Source:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.9791998In total, johoe posted that he swept over
870 bitcoins to his own wallet to save the funds from being stolen by someone else who discovered the same vulnerability.
“…the 519.70399999 has been moved to the paper wallet
http://blockchain.info/address/1D58NtxrZF4iUnGAFojnqNpPuGi9rrcyVf . I am operating under the conclusion (even if mistaken) that 1TBZjmXho6mdGhoESaMV2svtqJXYtWfEp had a collision and somebody/some computer didn't realize (or care) that it was already in use. SO, if you also have the private key for 1TBZjmXho6mdGhoESaMV2svtqJXYtWfEp, sign with it and I will verify it matches mine, then send your BTC to the new address of your choosing.”
Source:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/519704-received-at-1tbzjmxho6mdghoesamv2svtqjxytwfep-lost-and-found-133122I am not sure how this saga concluded, but his intention to inform the community and give back what doesn’t belong to him deserves every praise.
3.In June 2010,
Gavin Andreasen announced his bitcoin faucet on Bitcointalk. He was giving away 5 bitcoins per user to spread the word and give new users a chance to test out bitcoin.
It didn’t take long for someone to find a way to abuse the system. Luckily, it was
wobber who had no intentions of keeping the claimed coins and gave them back. He only wanted to test if it could be abused.
I am going to add a one-donation-per-bitcoin address rule to make it a teeny-tiny bit harder to cheat.
Source:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.1541The amounts wobber claimed from the faucet, might not have been a lot at the time, but his actions reminded me of simpler times when people were decent. That’s why I think he deserves mention in this thread.
4.The next case doesn’t involve a user from Bitcointalk. It involves the companies Bitmain and BitGo. Due to a bug in BitGo’s recovery tool, a user ended up paying over
85 bitcoins in transaction fees for a 16 BTC transaction he sent in April 2015. You can view the transaction id
here.The user who was affected contacted BitGo and Bitmain and explained what happened. The transaction got mined by AntPool.
This is BitGo’s reply on the incident that led to these enormous fees:
500 BTC Donation incoming to the Faucet !
~ Only original Bitcoin users will ever understand the true economic value of Pizzas and Haircuts. Bitcoin for ALL
Source:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.7536
That’s all for today. I am sure there are many more examples where members did the right thing, but it’s hard to find. Feel free to share similar examples that you know of.
Happy New Year!