Author

Topic: What's up with the need for tBTC? (Read 590 times)

member
Activity: 316
Merit: 43
December 20, 2022, 12:07:54 AM
#34
damn I also curios about this one since bitcoin doesn't have popular smart contract like ethereum or binance smart chain. Or maybe they are try scam people, but if this the case is it too obvious.

I usually ask dozen of testnet coin on eth, bsc, polygon or other form of EVM chain to use test DecentralizedApp but I'm never seen dApp in tBTC
Like you I have never seen this tBTC DApp. And I have no idea about this tBTC. After coming here, I thought this is a coin like Bitcoin. If I'm not wrong, then what I think is true? I want to know your thoughts about this tBTC.
copper member
Activity: 2156
Merit: 983
Part of AOBT - English Translator to Indonesia
December 19, 2022, 10:59:07 PM
#33
damn I also curios about this one since bitcoin doesn't have popular smart contract like ethereum or binance smart chain. Or maybe they are try scam people, but if this the case is it too obvious.

I usually ask dozen of testnet coin on eth, bsc, polygon or other form of EVM chain to use test DecentralizedApp but I'm never seen dApp in tBTC
legendary
Activity: 3290
Merit: 16489
Thick-Skinned Gang Leader and Golden Feather 2021
December 19, 2022, 01:26:26 PM
#32
Did you have any 'accepted' (by Bitcoin Core) blocks? That maybe just didn't propagate quickly?
I haven't seen it (and don't know how I could check). I don't expect propagation speed to be a problem.

Quote
How many tries will it take to find a valid block at this difficulty? 1 or 2 tries, no?
I don't know. If it's the difference between 166 ns and 3.3 ps, that shouldn't matter compared to pinging the rest of the internet.

Quote
I know from ASICs that the driver tells the chip to go through a whole range of parameters, otherwise the overhead would be too high.
In case the CPU miner is configured similarly, maybe only asking for new work every couple of seconds; that could be a problem.
It now makes me wonder if nullama tested it with CPU. A few seconds would indeed be far too much.

Quote
I may try it myself; just don't really feel like stressing my computer hardware so much.
If you promise to behave, I can give you access Smiley
hero member
Activity: 882
Merit: 5834
not your keys, not your coins!
December 19, 2022, 01:10:52 PM
#31
Right now, over last 24h I got another 33 blocks.
I guess my CPU miner still loses from the ASICS and GPU miners, even when the difficulty is 1. Or I made a mistake somewhere.
That's one possibility. Did you have any 'accepted' (by Bitcoin Core) blocks? That maybe just didn't propagate quickly?

Quote
What's your hashrate like?
I think it's 6.58Mh/s:
Code:
bfgminer version 5.5.0-34-g866fd36f - Started: [2022-12-18 17:27:16] - [  1 day  01:23:03]
 [M]anage devices [P]ool management [S]ettings [D]isplay options                                                                                                                              [H]elp [Q]uit
 Pool 0: 89.38.99.81         Diff:86.6M  + GBT   LU:[18:49:57]  User:loyce
 Block: ...50f75919ef686c53  Diff:86.6M (619.7T)  Started: [18:32:55]  I: 0.00 BTC/hr
 ST:10  F:0  NB:119  AS:0  BW:[807/ 13 B/s]  E:0.00  BS:155
 8            |  6.31/ 6.38/ 6.58Mh/s | A:0 R:0+0(none) HW:0/none
Indeed; around 50,000 times slower than a BM1397 chip. That means you're trying 1 hash every 166.7 nanoseconds, meanwhile the ASIC can do one hash every 3.333ps. I'm honestly not sure that you need anything much faster for a difficulty of 1.
How many tries will it take to find a valid block at this difficulty? 1 or 2 tries, no?

I know from ASICs that the driver tells the chip to go through a whole range of parameters, otherwise the overhead would be too high.
In case the CPU miner is configured similarly, maybe only asking for new work every couple of seconds; that could be a problem.

Quote
I did miss the requirement of ~40GB disk space in mocaccino's guide, but it wasn't too bad; IBD went relatively quick.
I used nullama's guide.
I may try it myself; just don't really feel like stressing my computer hardware so much.
hero member
Activity: 1022
Merit: 642
Magic
December 19, 2022, 01:02:36 PM
#30

What happened to all existing testnet Bitcoins anyway? Who's hoarding them?

Since they are free, people often dont bother to keep the seed words of their wallets and loose access to the coins. They simply get new coins if they need them. Since the reward is dropping and there seems to be a higher and higher demand in general it is basically impossible to get a large amount these days.
legendary
Activity: 3290
Merit: 16489
Thick-Skinned Gang Leader and Golden Feather 2021
December 19, 2022, 12:52:11 PM
#29
Right now, over last 24h I got another 33 blocks.
I guess my CPU miner still loses from the ASICS and GPU miners, even when the difficulty is 1. Or I made a mistake somewhere.

Quote
What's your hashrate like?
I think it's 6.58Mh/s:
Code:
bfgminer version 5.5.0-34-g866fd36f - Started: [2022-12-18 17:27:16] - [  1 day  01:23:03]
 [M]anage devices [P]ool management [S]ettings [D]isplay options                                                                                                                              [H]elp [Q]uit
 Pool 0: 89.38.99.81         Diff:86.6M  + GBT   LU:[18:49:57]  User:loyce
 Block: ...50f75919ef686c53  Diff:86.6M (619.7T)  Started: [18:32:55]  I: 0.00 BTC/hr
 ST:10  F:0  NB:119  AS:0  BW:[807/ 13 B/s]  E:0.00  BS:155
 8            |  6.31/ 6.38/ 6.58Mh/s | A:0 R:0+0(none) HW:0/none
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 CPU 0:       | 793.7/796.3/799.0kh/s | A:0 R:0+0(none) HW:0/none
 CPU 1:       | 800.0/798.5/658.0kh/s | A:0 R:0+0(none) HW:0/none
 CPU 2:       | 799.3/793.9/752.0kh/s | A:0 R:0+0(none) HW:0/none
 CPU 3:       | 799.5/798.1/893.0kh/s | A:0 R:0+0(none) HW:0/none
 CPU 4:       |  0.80/ 0.80/ 1.32Mh/s | A:0 R:0+0(none) HW:0/none
 CPU 5:       | 799.5/798.7/658.0kh/s | A:0 R:0+0(none) HW:0/none
 CPU 6:       | 782.2/795.5/940.0kh/s | A:0 R:0+0(none) HW:0/none
 CPU 7:       | 788.5/798.3/564.0kh/s | A:0 R:0+0(none) HW:0/none
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 [2022-12-19 11:49:03] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block
 [2022-12-19 11:53:27] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block
 [2022-12-19 12:08:22] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block
 [2022-12-19 12:25:17] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block
 [2022-12-19 12:27:02] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block
 [2022-12-19 12:46:43] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block
 [2022-12-19 13:06:31] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block
 [2022-12-19 13:10:19] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block
 [2022-12-19 13:25:09] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block
 [2022-12-19 13:30:39] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block
 [2022-12-19 13:41:09] Longpoll from pool 0 detected new block

Quote
And do you have the node fully synced (just in case)?
Yes (it's only 35 GB).

Quote
I did miss the requirement of ~40GB disk space in mocaccino's guide, but it wasn't too bad; IBD went relatively quick.
I used nullama's guide.
hero member
Activity: 882
Merit: 5834
not your keys, not your coins!
December 19, 2022, 07:48:52 AM
#28
I just mined 27 blocks over the last ~24h using a single Compac F; those were always 1-difficulty-blocks, so it should have been possible with CPU, just as well.
Your post got me motivated, so I've been mining Testnet on CPU (Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E3-1270 V2 @ 3.50GHz) for the past 19 hours. So far, not a single block mined.
Wow, interesting!
Right now, over last 24h I got another 33 blocks.
What's your hashrate like? And do you have the node fully synced (just in case)?

I did miss the requirement of ~40GB disk space in mocaccino's guide, but it wasn't too bad; IBD went relatively quick.
legendary
Activity: 3290
Merit: 16489
Thick-Skinned Gang Leader and Golden Feather 2021
December 19, 2022, 07:14:58 AM
#27
I just mined 27 blocks over the last ~24h using a single Compac F; those were always 1-difficulty-blocks, so it should have been possible with CPU, just as well.
Your post got me motivated, so I've been mining Testnet on CPU (Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E3-1270 V2 @ 3.50GHz) for the past 19 hours. So far, not a single block mined.

Could be that these people, especially if they are newbies mistake tBTC for BTC
I've used a few Testnet wallets (when playing around with LN) that show Bitcoin's dollar value for Testnet Bitcoins. I can imagine that's confusing, and makes some people believe it has value.
hero member
Activity: 1750
Merit: 589
December 18, 2022, 01:52:14 PM
#26
Could be that these people, especially if they are newbies mistake tBTC for BTC and thought you were giving it out as some sort of a raffle or a giveaway. It could easily be the case considering how it takes a while for a regular person to even get a hold of what testnets are.

Or it could also be a case of people scamming people who are none the wiser about how bitcoin works. Ber months are coming and these people could've seen that they could scam other people with tBTC by saying it is BTC. If these people aren't that knowledgeable about the cryptocurrency world they might just fall for it.

All in all my friend, don't hesitate to ask them what they would use it for, maybe even decline the ones who seem fishy to you. You're the one who holds the tBTCs, you're the boss.
hero member
Activity: 2702
Merit: 716
Nothing lasts forever
December 18, 2022, 09:26:43 AM
#25
I run a tBTC (testnet Bitcoin) faucet, and i've publicly stated i would loan out tBTC to anybody who needs it in the past... Usually i get 2-3 messages per month requesting "random" amount of tBTC from newbies...

After I explain the collateral I estimated a couple months ago will no longer suffice because the difficulty on the testnet rose from 10M to >16M, the block reward went from <0.4 to <0.2 tBTC/block and the price per Th on miningrigrentals rose aswell since my posts about loaning out tBTC, they drop the subject never to be heared off again.

However, yesterday i received 16!!! messages asking for loads of tBTC (most of them in the ~100 tBTC range). The messages were evenly spread between bitcointalk PM's, my 2 public email addresses and my twitter inbox.

This night, 2 more messages, resulting in 18 requests in little over 24 hours...

I'm missing something here... Anybody knows some secret I don't?

I mean, electrum has released version 4... I could understand people asking for tBTC to test out the LN on testnet... But you wouldn't need 100 tBTC for this. Other than that, i'm drawing blanks...

It can be anything. May be someone is trying to scam someone which is why they are asking for 100 tBTC.
May be someone don't know they can use fractions of tBTC and hence may be asking for 100 tBTC to test something.
May be someone wants to test more number of wallets or something but even then they wouldn't require such a huge amount of tBTC.
hero member
Activity: 882
Merit: 5834
not your keys, not your coins!
December 18, 2022, 08:05:55 AM
#24
If somebody needs testnet coins, it should be as simple as
=> editing bitcoin.conf on your testnet node (which you are running anyways, since you're developing a project for which you need tBTC)
=> running minerd for 1 hour
=> waiting untill your mined tBTC is mature
=> having enough tBTC for your project, donating the rest to a faucet when you're done

However, i've calculated that at this point in time there is > 100 Th running on the testnet (115 Th iirc, i did the calculations a couple days ago). No home cpu miner can ever compete with this... If this continues, a developer would actually need to buy an ASIC or rent hashrate to get enough tBTC to test his/her project, since nobody knows who's hoarding tBTC, and people with faucets (like me) also have a very hard time getting tBTC to give away for free.
That's actually possible, though! With home CPU most probably, too. I just mined 27 blocks over the last ~24h using a single Compac F; those were always 1-difficulty-blocks, so it should have been possible with CPU, just as well. Testnet difficulty drops to 1 after 20 minutes without new blocks, so developers who need tBTC for their project can literally get a full coin over a day by following nullama's guides.
legendary
Activity: 1568
Merit: 6660
bitcoincleanup.com / bitmixlist.org
July 13, 2020, 04:25:49 PM
#23
I haven't heared about anybody getting scammed with tBTC (yet). Seems like a strange attack method. I mean, you have to persuade somebody to either run a wallet that's clearly marked as a testnet wallet, or you have to convince them to start the wallet with a parameter that clearly says "testnet" or you have to convice them to run a "fake" wallet... Next to this, you'd have to convice your victim that he/she cannot use a normal block explorer. And you have to convice them that testnet is just like main net, and he has to ignore the "test" in front of everything, and the warnings everywhere, and the posts on forums, blogs,... that indicate that tBTC has zero value.

It just feels like a criminal would take the path of least resistance... Why scam somebody with tBTC? If you have to get them to run an "alternative" wallet, or a standard wallet in an "alternative" way, why not just push a completely fake wallet on them, one that's basically just showing fake transactions that get pulled from a central server? Or use some crapcoin or token and sell it as BTC.

I'm not saying it's impossible, since you guys have actually heared from such attacks i'm not doubting these kind of things do happen... It just seems unlikely to have caused such an "explosion" in tBTC demand

I also don't get it. I'm interpreting this as people stealing tBTC from victims. Or is it that they "trade" BTC with them for tBTC?

  • Do i tell new people i no longer lend out tBTC.
  • Do i start doing "backgroundchecks" that cost a lot of time and effort, especially for a free service.
  • Do i keep lending out tBTC, eventough part of it might be used to scam... But then again, allmost everything you lend to anybody can be used to scam in one way or another...
I haven't got a clue... Does the good outweigh the bad, is it worth my effort,...  Sad

Perhaps you can impose a small tBTC limit so that even in the case that people try to scam with it, they won't be able to pull off a lot of money. Something like the equivalent of $20, if it were real money.
full member
Activity: 1204
Merit: 220
(ノಠ益ಠ)ノ
July 13, 2020, 12:06:47 PM
#22
I don't know what is tBTC but after few minute to do research, I know it is testnet bitcoin.

I am confusing and don't know which wallet is the lightest and best wallets to use testnet bitcoin. Would you mind helping me to choose the lightest wallet for tBTC? My laptop does not have too much free storage space.

usually you spin the core and/or electrum, depends on your needs. current testnet generation (v3) is around 25GB in size.
hero member
Activity: 1442
Merit: 775
July 11, 2020, 11:43:12 PM
#21
I don't know what is tBTC but after few minute to do research, I know it is testnet bitcoin.

I am confusing and don't know which wallet is the lightest and best wallets to use testnet bitcoin. Would you mind helping me to choose the lightest wallet for tBTC? My laptop does not have too much free storage space.
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 10611
July 11, 2020, 09:04:50 AM
#20
To be honest, i don't have a clear-cut answer for this conundrum either.... Just as a brainstorm exercise i was thinking about a reset of the testnet and a huge premine done by the dev's on this newtestnet.
Why does Bitcoin Testnet have block halving in the first place? If it's for testing the protocol, they should be done by now. Considering the scarcity problems it might even be good to change the protocol for increasing inflation: a block doubling instead of halving will ensure testnet coins won't be scarce again.

the point of testnet is to test the same exact thing without having any cost. if we start changing the protocol then we end up with something that is no longer bitcoin, in other words it becomes an altcoin instead of bitcoin-testnet. not to mention that the clients have to significantly change their code to implement changes that may seem simple (such as block reward).

if the coins are indeed scarce then the problem is somewhere else (coins burnt or hoarded).
legendary
Activity: 3290
Merit: 16489
Thick-Skinned Gang Leader and Golden Feather 2021
July 11, 2020, 04:53:46 AM
#19
To be honest, i don't have a clear-cut answer for this conundrum either.... Just as a brainstorm exercise i was thinking about a reset of the testnet and a huge premine done by the dev's on this newtestnet.
Why does Bitcoin Testnet have block halving in the first place? If it's for testing the protocol, they should be done by now. Considering the scarcity problems it might even be good to change the protocol for increasing inflation: a block doubling instead of halving will ensure testnet coins won't be scarce again.
legendary
Activity: 3584
Merit: 5248
https://merel.mobi => buy facemasks with BTC/LTC
July 11, 2020, 04:45:57 AM
#18
--snip--
What happened to all existing testnet Bitcoins anyway? Who's hoarding them? It's not supposed to be scarce, and it's not supposed to be in high demand. They're supposed to be easy to get for whoever needs them for testing anything Bitcoin related.
At this point I'd say it's about time to reset testnet again, and start over from scratch. So instead of the options above, you could probably accelerate this by selling them! Of course, testnet Bitcoins aren't supposed to have value, and they aren't supposed to be sold, but at this point a reset may be better (for a while).
100% in agreement... If somebody needs testnet coins, it should be as simple as
=> editing bitcoin.conf on your testnet node (which you are running anyways, since you're developing a project for which you need tBTC)
=> running minerd for 1 hour
=> waiting untill your mined tBTC is mature
=> having enough tBTC for your project, donating the rest to a faucet when you're done

However, i've calculated that at this point in time there is > 100 Th running on the testnet (115 Th iirc, i did the calculations a couple days ago). No home cpu miner can ever compete with this... If this continues, a developer would actually need to buy an ASIC or rent hashrate to get enough tBTC to test his/her project, since nobody knows who's hoarding tBTC, and people with faucets (like me) also have a very hard time getting tBTC to give away for free.

A reset is direly needed... However, if it's just a reset without any other protocol changes, the miner (or miners) that's currently using relatively new ASIC's on the testnet will just continue mining with his ASICs on the "new" testnet, and not much will change... Offcourse, if the block reward is once again 50 tBTC, at least a developer can rent hashrate for a short amount of time, since he'd only have to solve one or two blocks to get enough tBTC for about any project he fancies (at the moment, you'd have to solve a whopping 500 blocks to have ~100 tBTC).

To be honest, i don't have a clear-cut answer for this conundrum either.... Just as a brainstorm exercise i was thinking about a reset of the testnet and a huge premine done by the dev's on this newtestnet. The devs can then either run an honest high-claim tBTC faucet themselves, or fund the 6 or 7 existing faucets (maybe even make an agreement with the faucet owners first, about minimum claim amounts, no popups, minimal advertisement,...). An other option would be to look at the altcoin community and borrow some of their idears (like making the testnet POW/POS, or making resets very common so nobody wants to burn electricity to mine tBTC that'll only be valid for a couple of days/weeks).

At this moment, coinbase rewards seems to end up funding addresses like this one:
live.blockcypher.com/btc-testnet/address/2N3oefVeg6stiTb5Kh3ozCSkaqmx91FDbsm/

Once in a while, other addresses pop up tough... But not very often.
legendary
Activity: 3290
Merit: 16489
Thick-Skinned Gang Leader and Golden Feather 2021
July 11, 2020, 02:17:39 AM
#17
  • Do i tell new people i no longer lend out tBTC.
  • Do i start doing "backgroundchecks" that cost a lot of time and effort, especially for a free service.
  • Do i keep lending out tBTC, eventough part of it might be used to scam... But then again, allmost everything you lend to anybody can be used to scam in one way or another...
What happened to all existing testnet Bitcoins anyway? Who's hoarding them? It's not supposed to be scarce, and it's not supposed to be in high demand. They're supposed to be easy to get for whoever needs them for testing anything Bitcoin related.
At this point I'd say it's about time to reset testnet again, and start over from scratch. So instead of the options above, you could probably accelerate this by selling them! Of course, testnet Bitcoins aren't supposed to have value, and they aren't supposed to be sold, but at this point a reset may be better (for a while).

Some altcoin giving an incentive for Testnet Bitcoins, that's not how testnet is supposed to be used.

Should asking for Testnet Bitcoins even be allowed in Project Development? It's not as if they're sharing a new project or anything, it's basically no different than asking for donations:
7. No begging.
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 1321
Bitcoin needs you!
legendary
Activity: 2128
Merit: 1293
There is trouble abrewing
July 09, 2020, 09:47:38 AM
#15
  • Do i tell new people i no longer lend out tBTC.
  • Do i start doing "backgroundchecks" that cost a lot of time and effort, especially for a free service.
  • Do i keep lending out tBTC, eventough part of it might be used to scam... But then again, allmost everything you lend to anybody can be used to scam in one way or another...
I haven't got a clue... Does the good outweigh the bad, is it worth my effort,...  Sad

it is hard to say since it could take some effort.
i'd say it depends on how many coins they are asking for and who they are. for example if a known developer were to ask for coins or an anonymous person. and there is a difference between a small amount and something like 100. the later is always shady.

and i still say that almost all cases do not need large amounts of tbtc or any amount for that matter. they can perform all their tests on regtest and generate millions of coins in literary a couple of seconds and perform their tests.

if i were you i'd demand explanation from those who ask huge amounts or even a link to the project they are developing .
legendary
Activity: 3584
Merit: 5248
https://merel.mobi => buy facemasks with BTC/LTC
July 09, 2020, 09:00:14 AM
#14

That might be part of the explanation... Thanks for sharing the link Smiley
legendary
Activity: 3038
Merit: 4418
Crypto Swap Exchange
legendary
Activity: 2912
Merit: 6403
Blackjack.fun
July 09, 2020, 08:41:17 AM
#12
I'm having a bit of an ethical problem tough: i do think tBTC is usefull, and i'm 100% sure some people will actually need it for legit reasons. Some of these reasons might be private (for example: somebody building a mixer), and i believe in an individual's right not telling me why they need the tBTC.
On the other hand, they might be sketchy and use the tBTC for illegal activity's....

Consider a career in politics  Grin , that would teach you some things!

Right now you're giving test coins to people who you trust right? If they do bad things it's their problem or if you doubt them stop dealing with those persons in the first place. But, at the same time, you're just an individual, it's not like you hold ultimate control over the entire supply of coins, if you don't do it others will, scammers will always find a way.

legendary
Activity: 3584
Merit: 5248
https://merel.mobi => buy facemasks with BTC/LTC
July 09, 2020, 08:34:16 AM
#11
Well, i've learned something new today anyways... People do get scammed with tBTC.

This being said, it does seem like the amount of cases is still very small, and rightfully so, those people getting scammed seem to have no clue they're actually transferring wealth. I guess some people are always susceptible to scams, no matter how transparent they are.

It's like buying play money and trying to use it in a shop and being successful in convincing the shopkeeper the stamp "not legal tender" actually means "real money". Seems completely unlikely to happen in the fiat world, but for some reason some people seem to drop several iq points as soon as any digital form of money comes into play.

I'm having a bit of an ethical problem tough: i do think tBTC is usefull, and i'm 100% sure some people will actually need it for legit reasons. Some of these reasons might be private (for example: somebody building a mixer), and i believe in an individual's right not telling me why they need the tBTC.
On the other hand, they might be sketchy and use the tBTC for illegal activity's....

  • Do i tell new people i no longer lend out tBTC.
  • Do i start doing "backgroundchecks" that cost a lot of time and effort, especially for a free service.
  • Do i keep lending out tBTC, eventough part of it might be used to scam... But then again, allmost everything you lend to anybody can be used to scam in one way or another...
I haven't got a clue... Does the good outweigh the bad, is it worth my effort,...  Sad


legendary
Activity: 2128
Merit: 1293
There is trouble abrewing
July 09, 2020, 08:13:33 AM
#10
Seems like a strange attack method. I mean, you have to persuade somebody to either run a wallet that's clearly marked as a testnet wallet, or you have to convince them to start the wallet with a parameter that clearly says "testnet" or you have to convice them to run a "fake" wallet...

reading some of the stories you would be surprised how easy it is to convince people of doing things that don't make any sense. for example in the following case the scammer told the victim to actually select "testnet" manually!
https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/75776/i-need-your-help-urgently-bitcoins

Quote
I was told to create a bitpay wallet & tick Testnet & Single Address. And i have received 1.182691BTC on 29/05/18.
legendary
Activity: 2912
Merit: 6403
Blackjack.fun
July 09, 2020, 08:01:04 AM
#9
I tried... Didn't get a clear answer tough...

Which makes things even more suspicious, sound weird that a DT member or someone with a lot of green trusts would try to avoid such an easy and harmless (normally) question


Possible... However, what i forgot to mention in my OP is that the 18 requests were not only from newbies, but also from people that've been here for years, even somebody from DT2, and somebody with green trust... Same on twitter: not only new profiles, but also somebody with a longtime profile.
Seems strange to me that these people would mess up a worthless craptoken en a 0-value testnet coin.

Really need  to dive into conspiracy territory here
It is possible they are getting requests of their own for those coins, might be that the actual source of the demand has not contacted you and maybe they are all acting like middlemen...and tBTC (the token) is another pretty shady project that had a bumpy road, getting test coins to try and scam some scammy tokens, is a bit farfetched.

Maybe a fork is getting launched that doesn't split from the main chain but from the test chain?  Grin Sounds ridiculous but the whole story is also ridiculous.
legendary
Activity: 3234
Merit: 5637
Blackjack.fun-Free Raffle-Join&Win $50🎲
July 09, 2020, 07:46:39 AM
#8
It is possible that those guys are confusing it with another token such as https://docs.keep.network/tbtc/.

I mean, electrum has released version 4... I could understand people asking for tBTC to test out the LN on testnet... But you wouldn't need 100 tBTC for this. Other than that, i'm drawing blanks...

I think it has to be one of these two things, or a combination of both. If we take into account that a good share of crypto users do not distinguish Bitcoin from blockchain and vice versa, then some obviously think that you are handing out some tokens for free, and 100 is such a nice round number Smiley

As for scams involving tBTC, examples can be found where tBTC is used, but selling watch-only wallets is much more popular because it requires even less effort and time. Yet every beginner is an ideal target for this type of scam, as it does not distinguish the original Bitcoin from some fork or testnetBTC.

Here is an example from 2017 -> Reflections on a Testnet Scam Incident
legendary
Activity: 3584
Merit: 5248
https://merel.mobi => buy facemasks with BTC/LTC
July 09, 2020, 03:35:28 AM
#7
--snip--
have you asked them why they want such large amounts for?

I tried... Didn't get a clear answer tough...

I haven't heared about anybody getting scammed with tBTC (yet). Seems like a strange attack method. I mean, you have to persuade somebody to either run a wallet that's clearly marked as a testnet wallet, or you have to convince them to start the wallet with a parameter that clearly says "testnet" or you have to convice them to run a "fake" wallet... Next to this, you'd have to convice your victim that he/she cannot use a normal block explorer. And you have to convice them that testnet is just like main net, and he has to ignore the "test" in front of everything, and the warnings everywhere, and the posts on forums, blogs,... that indicate that tBTC has zero value.

It just feels like a criminal would take the path of least resistance... Why scam somebody with tBTC? If you have to get them to run an "alternative" wallet, or a standard wallet in an "alternative" way, why not just push a completely fake wallet on them, one that's basically just showing fake transactions that get pulled from a central server? Or use some crapcoin or token and sell it as BTC.

I'm not saying it's impossible, since you guys have actually heared from such attacks i'm not doubting these kind of things do happen... It just seems unlikely to have caused such an "explosion" in tBTC demand
hero member
Activity: 2114
Merit: 603
July 09, 2020, 03:29:42 AM
#6
Seems strange to me that these people would mess up a worthless craptoken en a 0-value testnet coin.

Welp, though they're not super common, I've heard about past incidents concerning people scamming using testnet coins. So I guess there's that. Though unlikely, I would say that it's still very possible.

Surprisingly the most common reason behind that much tbtc would be scamming only. It's clear from OP that he had like 2-3 request and overnight it became 18 request, that itself tells us something is fishy going on.

IDK, the scammer is unplanned one, at least he should have made the request with some time gap and do the whole plot. LOLZ. He must not watch the Money Heist series I believe.  Tongue

Anyway, keeping jokes apart, I would say that its scammer group in my opinion.
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 10611
July 09, 2020, 03:03:37 AM
#5
give it a short time and if we see an increase in complains about how someone got scammed with testnet coins we can know the reason why they were asking for it here. a similar thing happened a couple of months ago and we saw the same result.

but also from people that've been here for years, even somebody from DT2, and somebody with green trust...
have you asked them why they want such large amounts for?
mk4
legendary
Activity: 2870
Merit: 3873
Paldo.io 🤖
July 09, 2020, 02:47:48 AM
#4
Seems strange to me that these people would mess up a worthless craptoken en a 0-value testnet coin.

Welp, though they're not super common, I've heard about past incidents concerning people scamming using testnet coins. So I guess there's that. Though unlikely, I would say that it's still very possible.
legendary
Activity: 3584
Merit: 5248
https://merel.mobi => buy facemasks with BTC/LTC
July 09, 2020, 02:05:55 AM
#3
The demand for tBTC is increasing since a few months ago iirc.

It is possible that those guys are confusing it with another token such as https://docs.keep.network/tbtc/.

Possible... However, what i forgot to mention in my OP is that the 18 requests were not only from newbies, but also from people that've been here for years, even somebody from DT2, and somebody with green trust... Same on twitter: not only new profiles, but also somebody with a longtime profile.
Seems strange to me that these people would mess up a worthless craptoken en a 0-value testnet coin.
legendary
Activity: 2170
Merit: 1789
July 09, 2020, 01:26:04 AM
#2
The demand for tBTC is increasing since a few months ago iirc.

It is possible that those guys are confusing it with another token such as https://docs.keep.network/tbtc/.
legendary
Activity: 3584
Merit: 5248
https://merel.mobi => buy facemasks with BTC/LTC
July 09, 2020, 01:00:46 AM
#1
I run a tBTC (testnet Bitcoin) faucet, and i've publicly stated i would loan out tBTC to anybody who needs it in the past... Usually i get 2-3 messages per month requesting "random" amount of tBTC from newbies...

After I explain the collateral I estimated a couple months ago will no longer suffice because the difficulty on the testnet rose from 10M to >16M, the block reward went from <0.4 to <0.2 tBTC/block and the price per Th on miningrigrentals rose aswell since my posts about loaning out tBTC, they drop the subject never to be heared off again.

However, yesterday i received 16!!! messages asking for loads of tBTC (most of them in the ~100 tBTC range). The messages were evenly spread between bitcointalk PM's, my 2 public email addresses and my twitter inbox.

This night, 2 more messages, resulting in 18 requests in little over 24 hours...

I'm missing something here... Anybody knows some secret I don't?

I mean, electrum has released version 4... I could understand people asking for tBTC to test out the LN on testnet... But you wouldn't need 100 tBTC for this. Other than that, i'm drawing blanks...
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