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Topic: [WTS] Shakaru debt (Read 3676 times)

vip
Activity: 574
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March 24, 2012, 09:28:30 PM
#43
The debt has been sold. This trainwreck of a thread is now over??

Lock it. Smiley
newbie
Activity: 25
Merit: 0
March 24, 2012, 09:08:26 PM
#42
The debt has been sold. This trainwreck of a thread is now over??
member
Activity: 64
Merit: 10
March 24, 2012, 09:00:21 PM
#41
Wow.u can sell debt here as well? wow.So in theory I can sell a debt of sum1 if I wanted to? Good idea.It helps keep things goin.

Welcome to System D. Let me introduce you to your new best friends, Money and Reputation...
member
Activity: 61
Merit: 10
March 24, 2012, 06:40:29 PM
#40
Wow.u can sell debt here as well? wow.So in theory I can sell a debt of sum1 if I wanted to? Good idea.It helps keep things goin.
legendary
Activity: 966
Merit: 1003
March 19, 2012, 11:21:54 AM
#39
I think it was to sell debt that will never be recovered..  Wait, thats pointless.

vip
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Don't send me a pm unless you gpg encrypt it.
March 19, 2012, 08:27:07 AM
#38
What's the point of this thread?
member
Activity: 71
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March 19, 2012, 02:11:06 AM
#37
Here's my dogma: Any follower of bronze-age superstitions, by definition someone
whose intelligence I have no respect for whatosever. I'll respect your right to
religious freedom. Everyone is free to be as stupid as they like as long as they don't
bother others with their stupidity.

As for my being misinformed, I was raised in a very catholic, very religious
environment. I was 5 when I started to poke holes in the logic of the whole
joke, and probably 7 when I stopped paying attention to it entirely. You've
chosen to keep on believing in Santa-Claus into adulthood, more power to
you. To me it simply says you're not particularly smart.

The religious issue is not entirely about intelligence. In fact there are plenty of smart people who participate or believe in religious anything.

And there are many reasons why sane, intelligent people choose to do so:
Some examples:

- to meet with the opposite sex
- to fit in with one's community / friends / family / etc
- required by law in some countries
- to serve some type of political purpose
- some people may have been brainwashed since a very early age causing some of there neurons to fuse in a way such that they won't accept an otherwise rational argument as it may cause a panic attack or nervous breakdown in their heads.

To say that it is because 'people are stupid' is only partially true since that description only applies to some people.

Then again, even atheism may be considered "not particularly smart" since an atheist doesn't know 100% for sure whether or not a higher power exists.
newbie
Activity: 25
Merit: 0
March 17, 2012, 10:57:13 AM
#36
I was making an allegorical reference to the level of judgement and misinformed ignorance in your statement by equating it with "racism". Let me put it in smaller words so you won't be troubled by trying to translate it into Foolish:

You made a very wrong statement about Catholics. You were wrong to do so. You don't understand Catholicism, and in making the statement you did in support of your argument, you made yourself look uneducated.

On the other hand- racism is often used to describe prejudice against religious practice in common vernacular. Consider the continuous references to the "racially" motivated hatred directed towards Muslims in the US and the UK.

To compound your poorly conceived notion by equating dogma with "stupid" only brings your prejudice to further light. A core belief within the context of faith is not "stupid", it is just that, a core belief held by a follower of a given faith. No different in application than your dogma that individuals cannot separate their working lives and integrity from their personal lives. A core belief, neh? Your faith allows you to pass judgement on others based on the acceptance that reputation is far more important that physical assets. Which is deliciously ironic, in that you are casting yourself in a very unethical light by attacking other maliciously, detracting from your reputation and credibility, while arguing that reputation and credibility should be paramount.

Whoa, this thread is entirely off-topic! This is a marketplace not a public forum....
sr. member
Activity: 574
Merit: 250
March 17, 2012, 10:42:28 AM
#35
I was making an allegorical reference to the level of judgement and misinformed ignorance in your statement by equating it with "racism". Let me put it in smaller words so you won't be troubled by trying to translate it into Foolish:

You made a very wrong statement about Catholics. You were wrong to do so. You don't understand Catholicism, and in making the statement you did in support of your argument, you made yourself look uneducated.

On the other hand- racism is often used to describe prejudice against religious practice in common vernacular. Consider the continuous references to the "racially" motivated hatred directed towards Muslims in the US and the UK.

To compound your poorly conceived notion by equating dogma with "stupid" only brings your prejudice to further light. A core belief within the context of faith is not "stupid", it is just that, a core belief held by a follower of a given faith. No different in application than your dogma that individuals cannot separate their working lives and integrity from their personal lives. A core belief, neh? Your faith allows you to pass judgement on others based on the acceptance that reputation is far more important that physical assets. Which is deliciously ironic, in that you are casting yourself in a very unethical light by attacking other maliciously, detracting from your reputation and credibility, while arguing that reputation and credibility should be paramount.
sr. member
Activity: 574
Merit: 250
March 16, 2012, 09:15:23 PM
#34
I now fully believe that you do indeed work for the finance industry.

You guys have been making lots of friends in recent years.
Does anyone still invite you to their houses ?

"Making the world a better place, one dollar at a time" Smiley

That was uncalled-for. Why does shit devolve into personal insults so quickly on these forums?

Take it as a personal insult if you must. It wasn't. It was a direct attack on this
deeply ingrained belief that way too many people hold that you can separate your
business dealings from you actually are.

The good old "nothing personal, it was just business, you understand" after you're
done fucking someone up the arse.

At one point in history, this is what made the catholic church so popular:
"I can sin all week, and be the perfect asshole, screw my customers all
day long ... it doesn't matter, I get to church on Sunday, where the great
laundromat in the sky takes it all away and makes me white as snow again"

The kind of logic DeathAndTaxes is spouting is exactly what landed the entire
world in the financial quagmire we're currently in: everything is fine as long
as I make a profit. Long term consequences ? Who cares, the world can burn
up in flames, as long as I'm making a buck.

Investing with a perfect asshole ? That completely fine. He can go rob a bank
and kill people, I don't care, I don't want to know, as long as my ROI looks good.

So, take it as an ad hominem attack if you want. My attack is on folks who claim
that being nice in business is bad idea and damn the consequences.

Being nice isn't the same as being stupid.

On the other hand, behaving like an arsehole has consequences other than
the immediate impact on ROI, e.g. how much people will be wanting to interact
with you on a forum knowing what you do for a leaving and where your ethics
are at.




As will people be offended and consider your racist and hateful misinterpretation of Catholic dogma to be ignorant. Adding something so grotesquely incorrect makes you look stupid, pick a better analogy.

And I'm glad there are business people who feel the way you do in the world. Really. It's nice to do business with someone who gives a damn. But it is also just as satisfying to do a deal with a complete arsehole, if both the arsehole and I come out of the deal feeling that we gained on the transaction. Emotion, compassion and anthropomorphizing transactions is nothing more than trying to build an artificial construct around a deal that makes you feel more protected.

It's a waste of effort.

I would absolutely encourage shakuru to buy up as much of his paper as possible at whatever discount he can wrangle. This has the immediate effect of allowing him to satisfy more of his debtors more rapidly. When one considers that there is approximately $20,000 in completely unsecured debt, backed by nothing more than a few comments made anonymously on a discussion forum? FFS, you should be damn glad to see anything on this.

And to back that up with a serious offer- I will buy as much of this debt as the market would care to sell at 1% on the original verified total, subject to a separate repayment schedule that shakuru and I would have to agree to. Four times what a lot of liquidations offer, and a full one bitcent on the bitcoin better than a complete rogering. Do you want the jingle of bitcoins in your pocket right now, right here, or do you want to have continued faith in the moral fiber and ethical make-up of shakuru?

Offer is on the table.
vip
Activity: 1358
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AKA: gigavps
March 16, 2012, 08:09:23 PM
#33
I'll pile on for 50% of the 63 BTC owed to me also.
donator
Activity: 289
Merit: 250
March 16, 2012, 08:07:52 PM
#32
So, while on this topic, does anyone want to buy Shakaru's debt to me too? I'm owed $377, will let it go for 35 BTC (roughly 50%).
newbie
Activity: 25
Merit: 0
March 16, 2012, 07:57:37 PM
#31
We're not talking about financing a house, here it's just $1K.

Like I said if the seller was smart he would have insta accepted your offer.  Obviously you think 50% is fair and the seller thinks it is too low.  I just find that funny.

I accepted it, so am I smart now?
sr. member
Activity: 313
Merit: 251
Third score
March 16, 2012, 03:55:08 PM
#30
Sorry a couple trillion dollars in deliquent debt changes hands every year.
 

True. It'also true that most of this debt is bought with the intention to be flipped to a greater fool. Does this apply here?
donator
Activity: 266
Merit: 252
I'm actually a pineapple
March 16, 2012, 02:36:05 PM
#29
Debt is for people that shouldn't be messing with bitcoins..... I don't want to be famous here so I don't think I'll expand on why or argue why- people with knowledge will know why along with reasons not mattering at all in any case. Enjoy fapping/speculating folks. (has overused the word 'why' in this topic)

wat.
sr. member
Activity: 454
Merit: 250
March 16, 2012, 01:02:05 PM
#28
Debt is for people that shouldn't be messing with bitcoins..... I don't want to be famous here so I don't think I'll expand on why or argue why- people with knowledge will know why along with reasons not mattering at all in any case. Enjoy fapping/speculating folks. (has overused the word 'why' in this topic)
donator
Activity: 266
Merit: 252
I'm actually a pineapple
March 16, 2012, 11:01:36 AM
#27
I'll buy it from you for the BTC equivalent of $625

Someone wants me to tell you that you're insane.

Okay, sure, but ... why exactly ?

It was just a joke Smiley I just think nobody was expecting anyone to pay that much for Shakaru's debt, is all.
donator
Activity: 266
Merit: 252
I'm actually a pineapple
March 16, 2012, 10:56:47 AM
#26
Shakaru biggest problem IMHO is that he was a nice guy who was totally out of his league.

I'm not sure that's an accurate picture to paint, either. If you look back at the beginning of the Shades Minoco thread (and others, before the shit hit the fan), he was acting fairly arrogantly towards prospective investors.
donator
Activity: 266
Merit: 252
I'm actually a pineapple
March 16, 2012, 10:55:25 AM
#25
I now fully believe that you do indeed work for the finance industry.

You guys have been making lots of friends in recent years.
Does anyone still invite you to their houses ?

"Making the world a better place, one dollar at a time" Smiley

That was uncalled-for. Why does shit devolve into personal insults so quickly on these forums?
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1079
Gerald Davis
March 16, 2012, 10:50:25 AM
#24
We're not talking about financing a house, here it's just $1K.

Like I said if the seller was smart he would have insta accepted your offer.  Obviously you think 50% is fair and the seller thinks it is too low.  I just find that funny.
sr. member
Activity: 465
Merit: 254
March 16, 2012, 10:49:49 AM
#23
And listen to DeathAndTaxes, he knows what he is talking about. Except for this part:

Shakaru biggest problem IMHO is that he was a nice guy who was totally out of his league.  His "niceguyness" didn't do jack crap for his investors ROI.

Shakaru is a scammer who put up a "nice guy" front to be able to stay in the scam as long as possible.
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1079
Gerald Davis
March 16, 2012, 10:45:31 AM
#22
Stop assuming.  I was ROI% I didn't say short term ROI%.

Anyone who assumes that a business venture doesn't exist to take the maximum ROI% option is naive.

Quote
However, I tend to disagree to the notion that everything boils down to ROI. That kind of thinking
is is a surefire way to demonstrate to all your business partners, present and future that you're the
perfect arsehole and convince them to never do business again with you.

Nice guy and business success rarely have anything to do with each other.  I have invested in many assholes over the years and would do it again.  Shakaru biggest problem IMHO is that he was a nice guy who was totally out of his league.  His "niceguyness" didn't do jack crap for his investors ROI.
sr. member
Activity: 465
Merit: 254
March 16, 2012, 10:45:25 AM
#21

I would also ruin his reputation: no one would ever extend a loan to him again.


You do realize that in total he owes more than $20 000 right? I really doubt his reputation here is worth more than that...
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1079
Gerald Davis
March 16, 2012, 10:41:26 AM
#20
Okay, sure, but ... why exactly ?

Routinely unsecured debt with full debtor history and demographic data, as well as the original contract, and ability to put derogatory data in credit report sells for <10% of face value.  Older or less desirable accounts may sell for less than 1% of face value.  The lowest accepted bid I have ever seen was 0.02% of face on quarter billion dollars in delinquent debt.

Now with is with complete employment information, access to credit reports, social security numbers, good phone lookups, certain legal rights under debt collection laws, ability to sue, access to original contract for enforcement in court, ability to run a skip trace (find someone who doesn't want to found), etc.

50% of face?  The seller should have accepted that offer within seconds and laughed all the way to the bank.

Then again I only write statistical models to evaluate the value of delinquent debt based on historical collections for a major debt buyer so I might not have a clue.
donator
Activity: 266
Merit: 252
I'm actually a pineapple
March 16, 2012, 10:35:56 AM
#19
Of course, Shakaru should have to give consent. We'll see about that offer...

I don't see why he should have to consent to it, at all. As far as he's concerned, if the debt gets sold, he owes the same amount of money to a different person.

That is a point of view ... mine is that getting everyone to agree on the deal is
probably a lot better for everyone's general happiness in the long run.


Certainly having his consent won't hurt general satisfaction, and it's nice of you to wait for it, but even if he was vehemently against the deal, he shouldn't have a say in it.
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1079
Gerald Davis
March 16, 2012, 10:35:39 AM
#18
Sorry a couple trillion dollars in deliquent debt changes hands every year.

Shakaru should do what has the highest ROI%. 
It may be to repay all investors in full. 
It may be to walk away from everything. 
It may be to settle for a fraction of the amount owed.

Quote
Fungibility of money is an irrelevant aspect of the conversation, it's not money that is at
stake here but rather reputation and credibility (credit history to put it in a jargon yanks
can grok).

That is a short sighted view.  Any decision can be traced back to NPV.  Not paying the debt has a cost but paying the debt also has a cost.  Free markets work when each side is aggressively working in the own self interest.  That is why settlement on debt is often an option. 

Many debts would simply never be repaid if settlement wasn't an option.  Given the choice of paying in full or accepting a temporary hit on ones credit many would just take the hit rather than trying to pay down an impossible amount of debt.  The ability to settle provides a net benefit to both sides. 
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 522
March 16, 2012, 06:50:41 AM
#17
Quote
Money is fungible.  What does it matter if you get $800 from him or $800 from someone else or $800 from him indirectly through someone else.  Obviously you are willing to settle for less than $1250 otherwise you wouldn't be offering it for sale.

Quote
The problem with shakaru buying it would be that it would be really unfair to the rest of his creditors. If shakaru somehow gets hold of $800 it should go directly to the fund for a fair repayment to all creditors, not just to buy one person out.

The 2nd quote explains the 1st. While money is in fact fungible and no it doesn't matter where the money comes from etc, this entire arrangement is predicated on the agreement that all of shakaru's money goes into the fund to repay creditors. Therefore, if he has money to buy back his own debt on this market he has defrauded the repay-creditors fund by the same amount.
sr. member
Activity: 465
Merit: 254
March 16, 2012, 04:00:21 AM
#16
No it wouldn't, that is tantamount to me being scammed,. I offered him a settlement of $1250, that is what he will have to pay.

Money is fungible.  What does it matter if you get $800 from him or $800 from someone else or $800 from him indirectly through someone else.  Obviously you are willing to settle for less than $1250 otherwise you wouldn't be offering it for sale.



The problem with shakaru buying it would be that it would be really unfair to the rest of his creditors. If shakaru somehow gets hold of $800 it should go directly to the fund for a fair repayment to all creditors, not just to buy one person out. 
vip
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Merit: 500
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March 15, 2012, 09:31:50 PM
#15
With all due respect, shakaru's role in all of this has 2 components:

1)  Validate the debts.

2) Pay back btc to the fund.


It is up to the fund to keep track of where the btc go to.  Shakaru doesn't get a say as to where the btc goes.  In addition, other claimants don't get a say either, so long as their share doesn't diminish (except in the case o new validated debts up until the window closes.)
hero member
Activity: 812
Merit: 1000
March 15, 2012, 09:24:33 PM
#14
i can see now why andrew suggested converting the full debt to a trade-able stock... it would make these negotiations much more efficient.
vip
Activity: 1358
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AKA: gigavps
March 15, 2012, 09:21:05 PM
#13
I will offer 20 btc for this debt.
hero member
Activity: 812
Merit: 1000
March 15, 2012, 09:07:58 PM
#12
Obviously you are willing to settle for less than $1250 otherwise you wouldn't be offering it for sale.

but 'settle for less' comes with strings attached.

the other aspect to it is timing.

faster money is more valuable money.

i.e. getting your hands on $400 within the next 10 minutes is probably preferable to getting $600 within 7 days or $900 within a month, or the full $1250 within nobody-really-knows-how-long.


i'd also settle for less than i'm currently owed, but that would also come with time-related provisions attached. otherwise i'll just wait it out.
donator
Activity: 266
Merit: 252
I'm actually a pineapple
March 15, 2012, 08:09:22 PM
#11
I'll buy it from you for the BTC equivalent of $625

Someone wants me to tell you that you're insane.
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1079
Gerald Davis
March 15, 2012, 07:27:16 PM
#10
Of course, Shakaru should have to give consent. We'll see about that offer...

I don't see why he should have to consent to it, at all. As far as he's concerned, if the debt gets sold, he owes the same amount of money to a different person.

Agreed.  Sellling debt occurs everday.  It would be useful for him to verify the debt exists (unless he already has).
donator
Activity: 266
Merit: 252
I'm actually a pineapple
March 15, 2012, 07:24:04 PM
#9
Of course, Shakaru should have to give consent. We'll see about that offer...

I don't see why he should have to consent to it, at all. As far as he's concerned, if the debt gets sold, he owes the same amount of money to a different person.
newbie
Activity: 25
Merit: 0
March 15, 2012, 07:16:48 PM
#8
No it wouldn't, that is tantamount to me being scammed,. I offered him a settlement of $1250, that is what he will have to pay.

Money is fungible.  What does it matter if you get $800 from him or $800 from someone else or $800 from him indirectly through someone else.  Obviously you are willing to settle for less than $1250 otherwise you wouldn't be offering it for sale.


It's a matter of principle and unfortunately pride. I cannot bring myself to sell my losses to the person that lost it for me so they can profit.
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1079
Gerald Davis
March 15, 2012, 07:13:48 PM
#7
No it wouldn't, that is tantamount to me being scammed,. I offered him a settlement of $1250, that is what he will have to pay.

Money is fungible.  What does it matter if you get $800 from him or $800 from someone else or $800 from him indirectly through someone else.  Obviously you are willing to settle for less than $1250 otherwise you wouldn't be offering it for sale.

newbie
Activity: 25
Merit: 0
March 15, 2012, 07:10:13 PM
#6
Shakaru owes me a substantial sum of money from a mining contract gone awry. Being as impatient as I am, I would like to see some of this cash very soon. I do believe that the debts will eventually be paid back and that Shakaru is trying to right his wrongs, but the timetable is unacceptable for me. So for anyone out there willing to wait PM with an offer!

Important note: I am owed $1250 dollars total, a purchase does not have to be in full.


Relevant link: https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/shades-minoco-shakaru-collections-debt-65989

I'll buy it from you for the BTC equivalent of $625

[Edit]

And it goes without saying: upon agreement of the three parties involved: me, you and shakaru


Of course, Shakaru should have to give consent. We'll see about that offer...


Would be awesome if Shakaru bought it.
No it wouldn't, that is tantamount to me being scammed,. I offered him a settlement of $1250, that is what he will have to pay.
donator
Activity: 4760
Merit: 4323
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
March 15, 2012, 06:23:55 PM
#5
Would be awesome if Shakaru bought it.

With a loan.
donator
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Gerald Davis
March 15, 2012, 06:22:59 PM
#4
Would be awesome if Shakaru bought it.
vip
Activity: 574
Merit: 500
Don't send me a pm unless you gpg encrypt it.
March 15, 2012, 06:17:15 PM
#3
I'm watching this for obvious reasons.
newbie
Activity: 40
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March 15, 2012, 06:11:38 PM
#2
I do believe that the debts will eventually be paid back and that Shakaru is trying to right his wrongs

Why?
newbie
Activity: 25
Merit: 0
March 15, 2012, 05:47:02 PM
#1
Shakaru owes me a substantial sum of money from a mining contract gone awry. Being as impatient as I am, I would like to see some of this cash very soon. I do believe that the debts will eventually be paid back and that Shakaru is trying to right his wrongs, but the timetable is unacceptable for me. So for anyone out there willing to wait PM with an offer!

Important note: I am owed $1250 dollars total, a purchase does not have to be in full.


Relevant link: https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/shades-minoco-shakaru-collections-debt-65989
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