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AndreaGail
14th May 2012, 05:56 PM
Upwards of $90,000 worth of Bitcoins have been stolen from an exchange service website this week, marking the second time in nearly two months that the cyber-currency has been compromised due to a security breach.

The administrators of Bitcoinica, a website that allows Bitcoin holders to trade in their e-currency for a value in US dollars, say that an attacker infiltrated their servers on May 11 and depleted the company’s online wallet of 18,547 virtual currency coins — worth roughly $87,000 USD. As a result, the website has suspended their transaction service while they open up an investigation to try to identify who broke into their servers and how the breach was accomplished.

Upon noticing a series of unusual transactions, the website’s owners say they shut down their servers and locked down accounts as a precaution, but assured its users that their “trading and financial data is safe (as far as I know), apart from the Bitcoin loss.” In an address added to the main page of Bitcoinica.com later on, however, the administrators note that other information stored on their database was “most likely compromised,” but add that only currency owned by the site itself was stolen and that the money of most of its users was presumably safe because personal user information is encrypted separately from the actual currency.

“We will have more to say soon about the circumstances surrounding this attack and what we will do to handle it,” continues the site.

According to the website Blockchain.info, there are roughly 9 million Bitcoins currently in circulation. The crypto-currency Bitcoin was revealed in 2009 by an anonymous programmer and has been used in online transactions since, particularly in incidents where consumers and retailers are more likely to favor anonymity in their online purchases across international borders. Bitcoins are created through a predetermined computer algorithm, and fluctuates in value just like traditional currency.

Although Bitcoins have become increasingly popular because they can be used to purchase goods and services when other currency is not feasible, some skeptics have condemned the system for poor security practices. Only ten weeks before the latest breach, hackers infiltrated the e-wallets of Bitcoin customers hosted on cloud-hosting provider Linode and managed to apprehend over 46,703 BTC (almost $228,845 USD worth)

"It certainly needs to work on its security,” DVICE writer Evan Dashevsky explained last year when discussing the currency.

Others have come out to attack the currency, but not because of security concerns. Earlier this month internal documents from the US Federal Bureau of Investigation were leaked in which FBI authorities express concern over Bitcoins because of the difficulty to track down its users.

“If Bitcoin stabilizes and grows in popularity, it will become an increasingly useful tool for various illegal activities beyond the cyber realm,” the FBI warns in the report. “Bitcoin might logically attract money launderers, human traffickers, terrorists, and other criminals who avoid traditional financial systems by using the Internet to conduct global monetary transfers.”

Other users of Bitcoin, of course, are hacktivists who ask for donations on the Web and law-abiding Internet users who are weary of the current international economy.

The FBI estimates that the amount of Bitcoins in circulation put the worth of the currency’s economy at around $44 million.

http://rt.com/usa/news/internet-stolen-bitcoin-currency-226/

ximmy
14th May 2012, 06:00 PM
dumbass!

solid
14th May 2012, 06:12 PM
bitcoins always seemed like a real bad idea, to me. Anything digital...poof, it's gone!

AndreaGail
14th May 2012, 06:21 PM
bitcoins always seemed like a real bad idea, to me. Anything digital...poof, it's gone!

I've always felt the same Solid!

Funny story about digital. My friends kept ragging on me for using cash for everything and extolling how much easier and safer cards were. One day, on a sunday, we went out to eat and both of their cards had apparently gotten compromised and shut down. So there I was, the only one that can pay for the meal lol

Silver Rocket Bitches!
14th May 2012, 06:56 PM
I wouldn't put my life savings into bitcoins but it's fun to speculate with a couple hundred. It's been steady at ~$5 per bitcoin lately but once in a while you get a swing where you can make a move. It's really no different than forex trading.

Mtgox is probably the safest place to park bitcoins atm. I've never even heard of this bitcoinica.

ximmy
14th May 2012, 07:11 PM
Mine are at Mtgox... I mean... last time I checked...

joboo
14th May 2012, 07:59 PM
Same diff as hearing about credit card companies getting 1000's of card details stolen, or any other major online institution getting compromised. Great big database of everything just sitting there.

Pretty stupid they actually kept all the coins on the site.

The site should use tokens that refers each transaction to a time sensitive, and password verified encrypted transaction.

Kind of like an infinite # of disposable virtual bank vaults with real time locking mechanisms that only contains one client transaction at a time.

A big pile of cash just sitting there on a website is going to attract thieves.

Neuro
15th May 2012, 01:05 AM
“Bitcoin might logically attract money launderers, human traffickers, terrorists, and other criminals who avoid traditional financial systems by using the Internet to conduct global monetary transfers.”
The second currency of Israel (after USD)...

Awoke
15th May 2012, 05:45 AM
I never liked the idea from the start (http://gold-silver.us/forum/showthread.php?49936-So-what-s-the-deal-with-bitcoins&p=419863&viewfull=1#post419863).


Sounds fishy to me.

PatColo
15th May 2012, 05:54 AM
Had to look up Agorism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agorism)

haven't listened:

Monday, May 14, 2012

Live Free FM 2012.05.12 (http://grizzom.blogspot.com/2012/05/live-free-fm-20120512.html)



http://livefree.fm/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/lffm3.jpg (http://livefree.fm/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/lffm3.jpg)
This week, Nathan Fraser and Alma Sommer of AgoristMarketplace have an in-depth discussion about agorism. We look at the history of agorism and current examples of stateless businesses that are actually working. We also discuss some of alternative currencies that are appearing in the marketplace. Bitcoin, shire silver, dime cards and more. If you feel like government is way to involved with small business and you are looking for ideas that are working to protect peoples right to trade without government intervention, this is the show for you.


Listen (http://www.talkshoe.com/resources/talkshoe/images/swf/lastEpisodePlayer.swf?fileUrl=http://livefree.fm/podpress_trac/web/729/0/TS-625096.mp3)
Download (http://livefree.fm/podpress_trac/web/729/0/TS-625096.mp3)

mick silver
15th May 2012, 07:51 AM
mine are in a safe and there REAL

SLV^GLD
15th May 2012, 11:50 AM
Bitcoin did not get hacked. That is FUD.

Someone's Bitcoins got stolen.
Bitcoin's strength lies in them being anonymous.
So, once they are stolen it is impossible to prove that the thief took your particular Bitcoins.

So, we are back to the paradigm, if you don't hold it you don't own it and holding presumes you are protecting from theft.

This is no different than any other physical property being removed from its owner. Why the FUD?

sirgonzo420
15th May 2012, 01:06 PM
Bitcoins! I almost forgot about 'em... I should have 100,000 or so sitting in a wallet from back when they were a dime a dozen.

solid
15th May 2012, 01:09 PM
Bitcoins! I almost forgot about 'em... I should have 100,000 or so sitting in a wallet from back when they were a dime a dozen.

Didn't they go up to $30 a bitcoin, then crashed back down to $5. The bitcoin bubble, I wouldn't put much faith into the bitcoin.

Silver Rocket Bitches!
15th May 2012, 06:31 PM
Didn't they go up to $30 a bitcoin, then crashed back down to $5. The bitcoin bubble, I wouldn't put much faith into the bitcoin.

As long as they're the currency of silkroad they aren't going anywhere..

sirgonzo420
15th May 2012, 07:55 PM
Didn't they go up to $30 a bitcoin, then crashed back down to $5. The bitcoin bubble, I wouldn't put much faith into the bitcoin.


Yeah, yeah.... I bet you're just a shill for "solidcoin".

http://i287.photobucket.com/albums/ll128/chucknorrisfan/SolidCoinAcceptedHere2.png


;D

Neuro
16th May 2012, 06:41 AM
I've always felt the same Solid!

Funny story about digital. My friends kept ragging on me for using cash for everything and extolling how much easier and safer cards were. One day, on a sunday, we went out to eat and both of their cards had apparently gotten compromised and shut down. So there I was, the only one that can pay for the meal lol

Guess who ended up paying for the meal?

sirgonzo420
16th May 2012, 06:58 AM
Guess who ended up paying for the meal?


AndreaGail's grandkids.