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View Full Version : "Dark Web" Exposes $75,000 Bitcoin-Based Bounty For Bernanke'



Ares
18th November 2013, 11:28 AM
As Silk Road emerged from the "dark-web", other sites have appeared offering services that are frowned upon by most. As Forbes reports, perhaps the most-disturbing is "The Assassination Market" run by a pseudnymous Kuwabatake Sanjuro. The site, remarkably, a crowdfunding service that lets anyone anonymously contribute bitcoins towards a bounty on the head of any government official–a kind of Kickstarter for political assassinations. As Forbes reports, NSA Director Alexander and President Obama have a BTC40 bounty (~$24,000) but the highest bounty - perhaps not entirely surprising - is BTC 124.14 (~$75,000) for none other than Ben Bernanke. Sanjuro's raison d'etre is chilling, "as a few politicians gets offed and they realize they’ve lost the war on privacy, the killings can stop and we can transition to a phase of peace, privacy and laissez-faire."



Via Forbes,

As Bitcoin becomes an increasingly popular form of digital cash, the cryptocurrency is being accepted in exchange for everything from socks to sushi to heroin. If one anarchist has his way, it’ll soon be used to buy murder, too.



...



For now, the site’s rewards are small but not insignificant. In the four months that Assassination Market has been online, six targets have been submitted by users, and bounties have been collected ranging from ten bitcoins for the murder of NSA director Keith Alexander and 40 bitcoins for the assassination of President Barack Obama to 124.14 bitcoins–the largest current bounty on the site–targeting Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve and public enemy number one for many of Bitcoin’s anti-banking-system users. At Bitcoin’s current rapidly rising exchanges rate, that’s nearly $75,000 for Bernanke’s would-be killer.



...



Sanjuro’s grisly ambitions go beyond raising the funds to bankroll a few political killings. He believes that if Assassination Market can persist and gain enough users, it will eventually enable the assassinations of enough politicians that no one would dare to hold office. He says he intends Assassination Market to destroy “all governments, everywhere.”



“I believe it will change the world for the better,” writes Sanjuro, who shares his handle with the nameless samurai protagonist in the Akira Kurosawa film “Yojimbo.” (He tells me he chose it in homage to creator of the online black market Silk Road, who called himself the Dread Pirate Roberts, as well Bitcoin inventor Satoshi Nakamoto.) ”Thanks to this system, a world without wars, dragnet panopticon-style surveillance, nuclear weapons, armies, repression, money manipulation, and limits to trade is firmly within our grasp for but a few bitcoins per person. I also believe that as soon as a few politicians gets offed and they realize they’ve lost the war on privacy, the killings can stop and we can transition to a phase of peace, privacy and laissez-faire.”



...



Like other so-called “dark web” sites, Assassination Market runs on the anonymity network Tor, which is designed to prevent anyone from identifying the site’s users or Sanjuro himself.



...



As for technically proving that an assassin is responsible for a target’s death, Assassination Market asks its killers to create a text file with the date of the death ahead of time, and to use a cryptographic function known as a hash to convert it to a unique string of characters.



...



“I am a crypto-anarchist,” Sanjuro concludes. “We have a bright future ahead of us.”


http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-11-18/dark-web-exposes-75000-bitcoin-based-bounty-bernankes-assassination

chad
18th November 2013, 11:56 AM
i was going to say "where's ares, has anyone heard of him?" but then i saw you posted this. :D

madfranks
18th November 2013, 12:26 PM
People conspiring to kill other people is nothing new, and although it is repugnant that one would claim to kill others to bring peace, I have to chuckle that enemy #1 on their list is Ben Bernanke.

ShortJohnSilver
18th November 2013, 12:31 PM
Of course, when is this news released? The day that the Senate holds hearings on Bitcoin! False flag BS, anyone?

Ares
18th November 2013, 12:31 PM
I found it pretty humorous. That someone would post a "crowd sourcing murder for hire" website in the dark web and that Ben Bernanke topped the list. Being a Libertarian, I just don't see the point in the violent approach of offing someone when the free market will crush the institution and what he stands for in time anyway.

Ares
18th November 2013, 12:32 PM
Of course, when is this news released? The day that the Senate holds hearings on Bitcoin! False flag BS, anyone?

Just more fuel for the fire for the Senate to say "we don't like bitcoin, bitcoin bad, bitcoin illegal" yadda yadda yadda.

vacuum
18th November 2013, 01:09 PM
Just more fuel for the fire for the Senate to say "we don't like bitcoin, bitcoin bad, bitcoin illegal" yadda yadda yadda.

But.....what if those who hold bitcoin crowd-source a hit for those within the senate which are trying to take bitcoin down? That would only be logical. It's almost like it's trying to keep itself alive when you think about it.

iOWNme
18th November 2013, 01:33 PM
This has the smell of FEDS all over it......I know a FED sting when i see one.

Who is going to pay $75k bitcoins to off a frontman who has no real power whatsoever?

Hey, didnt the Feds just STEAL a couple hundred thousand in bitcoins recently?

mamboni
18th November 2013, 01:37 PM
The best way to defeat the opposition is to lead it. This is a false flag. And I'd be surprised if the FED hasn't already infiltrated bitcoin and is ready to crush it by dumping a massive amount.

Serpo
18th November 2013, 01:40 PM
Instead Bernanke has hit everyone for $75,000 each in lost value of the fiat.

madfranks
18th November 2013, 01:57 PM
The best way to defeat the opposition is to lead it. This is a false flag. And I'd be surprised if the FED hasn't already infiltrated bitcoin and is ready to crush it by dumping a massive amount.

The majority of bitcoin action is now in China, where the Fed has little authority.

gunDriller
18th November 2013, 02:05 PM
how does one collect ?

Ares
18th November 2013, 02:07 PM
how does one collect ?

Probably similar to how Silk Road had their tumbler service integrated with the system. You cash out, it sends BTC's all over within the blockchain and then back in a round about way to the address you want them sent too. Then you take it to an exchange and cash out in whatever currency you want.

vacuum
18th November 2013, 02:12 PM
I think this has a pretty good chance of being a scam. The guy running it contacted forbes to try to get more publicity. He has control over who collects for the hits.

So once the service gets popular, he could just pay all the bitcoins to himself and disappear.

Ares
18th November 2013, 02:15 PM
I think this has a pretty good chance of being a scam. The guy running it contacted forbes to try to get more publicity. He has control over who collects for the hits.

So once the service gets popular, he could just pay all the bitcoins to himself and disappear.

Yep, he very well could and most likely will.

gunDriller
18th November 2013, 02:17 PM
As Silk Road emerged from the "dark-web", other sites have appeared offering services that are frowned upon by most. As Forbes reports, perhaps the most-disturbing is "The Assassination Market" run by a pseudnymous Kuwabatake Sanjuro. The site, remarkably, a crowdfunding service that lets anyone anonymously contribute bitcoins towards a bounty on the head of any government official–a kind of Kickstarter for political assassinations. As Forbes reports, NSA Director Alexander and President Obama have a BTC40 bounty (~$24,000) but the highest bounty - perhaps not entirely surprising - is BTC 124.14 (~$75,000) for none other than Ben Bernanke. Sanjuro's raison d'etre is chilling, "as a few politicians gets offed and they realize they’ve lost the war on privacy, the killings can stop and we can transition to a phase of peace, privacy and laissez-faire."



Via Forbes,

As Bitcoin becomes an increasingly popular form of digital cash, the cryptocurrency is being accepted in exchange for everything from socks to sushi to heroin. If one anarchist has his way, it’ll soon be used to buy murder, too.



...



For now, the site’s rewards are small but not insignificant. In the four months that Assassination Market has been online, six targets have been submitted by users, and bounties have been collected ranging from ten bitcoins for the murder of NSA director Keith Alexander and 40 bitcoins for the assassination of President Barack Obama to 124.14 bitcoins–the largest current bounty on the site–targeting Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve and public enemy number one for many of Bitcoin’s anti-banking-system users. At Bitcoin’s current rapidly rising exchanges rate, that’s nearly $75,000 for Bernanke’s would-be killer.


no, the Secret Service is not watching. /sarc

madfranks
18th November 2013, 02:18 PM
So once the service gets popular, he could just pay all the bitcoins to himself and disappear.

Disregarding that the service offered is assassination, would you give an ounce of gold to a guy on the street who promised some service in return? The same prudence is warranted when dealing with cryptos.

mamboni
18th November 2013, 04:43 PM
The majority of bitcoin action is now in China, where the Fed has little authority.


The FED operates shell corporations internationally. The whole advantage of bitcoin is transactability plus anonymity. Thse are simultaneously bitcoins greatest strengths and weaknesses. If I'm Bernanke and can create $billions with a keystroke, then manipulating the bitcoin market is positively trivially easy: I can buy and sell boatloads and no one is the wiser. It's still a very thin market and I can pump it up and crash it at will. There is absolutely no regulatory oversight of bitcoin. So no one knows whose buying. But I'd guess that the major demographic into bitcoin is the 20-30 year olds. How many of these kids have $600 to throw at a single bitcoin? This entire bitcoin run up stinks to high heaven of being a setup.

madfranks
18th November 2013, 05:16 PM
How many of these kids have $600 to throw at a single bitcoin? This entire bitcoin run up stinks to high heaven of being a setup.

You don't have to buy them one at a time. One can buy 0.5, 0.25, .01 or 0.01 BTC at a time. Also, just look at the exchanges, you can see for yourself all the buy and sell orders. Most of them are for under 1 BTC each. Here's a screenshot I just took, does this look like big money?

http://s8.postimg.org/54p02zzd1/btc_buy_sell.jpg

Silver Rocket Bitches!
18th November 2013, 06:00 PM
An obvious ruse to demonize BTC.

osoab
18th November 2013, 06:22 PM
An obvious ruse to demonize BTC.

I was thinking Ben was looking to drum up publicity on himself.

mick silver
18th November 2013, 07:16 PM
just one more reason for them to turn this over to nsa . they been thinking ahead 20 years are more . they knew this was coming are they made bitcoins up